07-25-2008
There happens to be no Linux 3.0. There may be a distribution to which you are referring, however Linux, the kernel, goes to 2.6.26 or so now. 3.0 is far in the future.
Do you perhaps mean Red Hat Enterprise Linux 3.0? The 3.0 there would refer to the Red Hat Enterprise part, in that it is a distribution (Packaging and solution of Linux, which is free and open source, and therefor available for anybody to package as such).
Knowing what you are using will help you get help.
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LEARN ABOUT OSF1
spellout
spell(1) General Commands Manual spell(1)
NAME
spell, spellin, spellout - Finds spelling errors
SYNOPSIS
spell [-b] [-i | -l] [-v | -x] [-d hash_list] [-s hash_stop] [-h history_list] [+word_list] [file...]
spellin [list] [number]
spellout [-d] list
The spell command reads words in file and compares them to those in a spelling list. Default files contain English words only, but you can
supply your own list of words in other languages.
STANDARDS
Interfaces documented on this reference page conform to industry standards as follows:
spell: XCU5.0
Refer to the standards(5) reference page for more information about industry standards and associated tags.
OPTIONS
[Tru64 UNIX] The following options are for the spell command only. Checks for correct British spelling. Besides preferring centre,
colour, programme, speciality, travelled, and so on, this option causes spell to insist upon the use of the infix -ise in words like stan-
dardise. [Tru64 UNIX] Specifies hash_list as the alternate spelling list. The default is /usr/lbin/spell/hlist[ab]. [Tru64 UNIX] Speci-
fies history_list as the alternate history list that is used to accumulate all output. The default is /usr/lbin/spell/spellhist. [Tru64
UNIX] Suppresses processing of included files through the and troff macros. If the -i and -l options are both specified, the last one of
the two options entered on the command line takes effect. [Tru64 UNIX] Follows the chain of all included files (.so and
spell(1)