@@ -51,7 +51,7 @@ Or even better, use it to announce libraries and post your own blog posts!
5151
5252[slack]: http://elmlang.herokuapp.com/
5353
54- Got a quick question, but do not feel comfortable asking on the mailing list?
54+ Got a quick question, but don't feel comfortable asking on the mailing list?
5555Chatting on [Slack][slack] is a great way to quickly learn from a real person.
5656
5757As for culture, prefer to ask rather than tell. You may be talking to someone
@@ -87,7 +87,7 @@ the Elm user group in SF. A lot of existing meetups are structured based on
8787
8888## Contribute
8989
90- **Every great contributor starts gradually.** At first that is means using Elm,
90+ **Every great contributor starts gradually.** At first this means simply using Elm,
9191maybe blogging about things they find interesting. After that, some folks
9292will find things they want to make easier and build packages, like [elm-css][],
9393that directly address their personal needs. This can be a great learning experience
@@ -103,9 +103,9 @@ how [elm-format][] and [elm-test][] were created.
103103Contribution usually means *technical* contribution, but community participation
104104is often more valuable! Helping people with questions. Writing blog posts. Creating
105105examples. This is all hugely positive for the community and the language, and I
106- think engineer minds tend to underestimate its importance. Hanging out community
106+ think engineer minds tend to underestimate its importance. Hanging out in community
107107forums also means you have more data on what people are struggling with, making it
108- easier to find timely projects that matches your skills and interests.
108+ easier to find timely projects that match your skills and interests.
109109
110110Point is, there are tons of ways to contribute! The goal should be to start gradually
111111and figure out what works as you build a relationship with the community.
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