> Start a new sentence at a new line (is this a "law" or just a good > idea?)
It's a good idea. Additionally, there's a difference between foo. bar and foo. bar The latter is the usual style with, say, emacs, so that it can easily find the end of a sentence (using a regular expression for searching) without stopping at abbreviations. With groff, you should do this too (this is, using two spaces after a full stop indicating a sentence ending) -- the second space is handled specially; cf. the documentation of the `.ss' request. > .mso de.tmac is preferred over -m de. I can understand that, thus > you don't have to fiddle with the command line. Just think of the `man' program or `mc': Those programs have a fixed calling sequence of groff. How shall these programs know that the document's language is German? Werner