into the reply buffer's keymap. Instead, it puts its commands on a
keymap prefix, then installs this prefix onto the buffer's keymap. What
this means is that you typically have to type more characters to invoke
-a Supercite command, but Supercite's keybindings can be made much more
+a Supercite command, but Supercite's key bindings can be made much more
consistent across MUAs.
You can control what key Supercite uses as its keymap prefix by changing
the variable @code{sc-mode-map-prefix}. By default, this variable is
set to @code{C-c C-p}; a finger twister perhaps, but unfortunately the
-best default due to the scarcity of available keybindings in many MUAs.
+best default due to the scarcity of available key bindings in many MUAs.
@item
@emph{Turns on Supercite minor mode.}