Yes don't worry too much about it,  this is a very common mistakes even for 
french speakers, it's so much common in fact that my teachers (I'm an 
infographist) strongly recommend us to use "index" instead of "accueil" in 
our websites because they have seen this error countless times in their 
student's works, if this can help make you feel a bit better :)
Le dimanche 13 juin 2021 à 04:44:02 UTC+2, [email protected] a écrit :

> I am in "d*euil*" (mourning) over my misspelled "ac*c**ueil*".
>
> One of the beauties of the French language:  the "euil" of deuil and the 
> "cueil" of "accueil" have the same sound.
>
> If I could time-travel to a certain period long ago, I'd be giving 
> somebody at the Académie française a slap from the future.
>
>
> On Saturday, June 12, 2021 at 7:56:39 PM UTC-3 Télumire wrote:
>
>> Just a head up, I've spotted a typo : " Acc*eu*il" --> "Accueil"
>> Great work on the UI btw !
>>
>> Le samedi 12 juin 2021 à 03:51:15 UTC+2, [email protected] a écrit :
>>
>>> G'day,
>>>
>>> Just an FYI about my ever-evolving approach to presenting TiddlyWiki's, 
>>> by default, in "reader view(?)", with alternative "normal TiddlyWiki view" 
>>> available via toggling.
>>>
>>>    - by "reader view" (internal debate on-going about that label), I 
>>>    mean hiding much of what looks like TiddlyWiki interface features, 
>>> without 
>>>    getting into anything too fancy
>>>    - for toggling, I went with no-fuss-no-muss open/close of the 
>>>    sidebar as the toggle for showing/hiding TiddlyWiki interface features
>>>
>>> To get the Full Monty experience of what I mean check out the before and 
>>> after (still very much a work in progress) of my Le P'tit Aurèle:
>>>
>>>    - my now deprecated version without "reader view" 
>>>    <https://leptitaurele.neocities.org/LePtitAurele_PreviousVersion.html>
>>>    - the new going-forward version with "reader view" at startup 
>>>    <https://leptitaurele.neocities.org/>
>>>
>>> I guess the mission is: how do I setup the kind of structure that makes 
>>> for easy/simple navigation to a lot of content without getting lost, while 
>>> still making it easy to access the full-features of TiddlyWiki for custom 
>>> digging into the content?
>>>
>>> Something like that.
>>>
>>> Cheers !
>>>
>>

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