@item M-h
Put region around current paragraph (@code{mark-paragraph}).
@item C-M-h
-Put region around current Lisp defun (@code{mark-defun}).
+Put region around current defun (@code{mark-defun}).
@item C-x h
Put region around entire buffer (@code{mark-whole-buffer}).
@item C-x C-p
the region so you can indent, case-convert, or kill a whole paragraph.
@kbd{C-M-h} (@code{mark-defun}) similarly puts point before and the
-mark after the current or following defun (@pxref{Moving by Defuns}).
-@kbd{C-x C-p} (@code{mark-page}) puts point before the current page,
-and mark at the end (@pxref{Pages}). The mark goes after the
-terminating page delimiter (to include it), while point goes after the
-preceding page delimiter (to exclude it). A numeric argument
-specifies a later page (if positive) or an earlier page (if negative)
-instead of the current page.
+mark after the current or following major top-level definition, or
+defun (@pxref{Moving by Defuns}). @kbd{C-x C-p} (@code{mark-page})
+puts point before the current page, and mark at the end
+(@pxref{Pages}). The mark goes after the terminating page delimiter
+(to include it), while point goes after the preceding page delimiter
+(to exclude it). A numeric argument specifies a later page (if
+positive) or an earlier page (if negative) instead of the current
+page.
Finally, @kbd{C-x h} (@code{mark-whole-buffer}) sets up the entire
buffer as the region, by putting point at the beginning and the mark at