+@@ -35,12 +44,12 @@
+ \fB\-n\fR, \fB\-\-new\fR
+ this option allows you to break the command line up into specifying multiple beeps. Each time this option is used, beep starts treating all further arguments as though they were for a new beep. So for example:
+
+-\fBbeep\fR -f 1000 -n -f 2000 -n -f 1500
++\fBbeep\fR \-f 1000 \-n \-f 2000 \-n \-f 1500
+
+-would produce a sequence of three beeps, the first with a frequency of 1000Hz (and otherwise default values), then a second beep with a frequency of 2000Hz (again, with things like delay and reps being set to their defaults), then a third beep, at 1500Hz. This is different from specifying a -r value, since -r repeats the same beep multiple times, whereas -n allows you to specify different beeps. After a -n, the new beep is created with all the default values, and any of these can be specified without altering values for preceeding (or later) beeps. See the \fBEXAMPLES\fR section if this managed to confuse you.
++would produce a sequence of three beeps, the first with a frequency of 1000Hz (and otherwise default values), then a second beep with a frequency of 2000Hz (again, with things like delay and reps being set to their defaults), then a third beep, at 1500Hz. This is different from specifying a \-r value, since \-r repeats the same beep multiple times, whereas \-n allows you to specify different beeps. After a \-n, the new beep is created with all the default values, and any of these can be specified without altering values for preceding (or later) beeps. See the \fBEXAMPLES\fR section if this managed to confuse you.
+ .TP
+ \fB\-s\fR, \fB\-c\fR
+-these options put \fBbeep\fR into input-processing mode. -s tells \fBbeep\fR to read from stdin, and beep after each newline, and -c tells it to do so after every character. In both cases, the program will also echo the input back out to stdout, which makes it easy to slip \fBbeep\fR into a text-processing pipeline, see the \fBEXAMPLES\fR section.
++these options put \fBbeep\fR into input-processing mode. \-s tells \fBbeep\fR to read from stdin, and beep after each newline, and \-c tells it to do so after every character. In both cases, the program will also echo the input back out to stdout, which makes it easy to slip \fBbeep\fR into a text-processing pipeline, see the \fBEXAMPLES\fR section.
+ .TP
+ \fB\-h\fR, \fB\-\-help\fR
+ display usage info and exit
+@@ -55,20 +64,22 @@
+ .TP
+ A more interesting standalone setup
+
+-\fBbeep\fR -f 300.7 -r 2 -d 100 -l 400
++\fBbeep\fR \-f 300.7 \-r 2 \-d 100 \-l 400