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Fixed two small typos #35969

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Sep 20, 2024
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4 changes: 2 additions & 2 deletions files/en-us/web/http/messages/index.md
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -30,10 +30,10 @@ The start-line and HTTP headers of the HTTP message are collectively known as th
> [!NOTE]
> The start-line is called the "request-line" in requests.

HTTP requests are messages sent by the client to initiate an action on the server. Their _request-line_ contain three elements:
HTTP requests are messages sent by the client to initiate an action on the server. Their _request-line_ contains three elements:

1. An _[HTTP method](/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Methods)_, a verb (like {{HTTPMethod("GET")}}, {{HTTPMethod("PUT")}} or {{HTTPMethod("POST")}}) or a noun (like {{HTTPMethod("HEAD")}} or {{HTTPMethod("OPTIONS")}}), that describes the action to be performed. For example, `GET` indicates that a resource should be fetched or `POST` means that data is pushed to the server (creating or modifying a resource, or generating a temporary document to send back).
2. The _request target_, usually a {{glossary("URL")}}, or the absolute path of the protocol, port, and domain are usually characterized by the request context. The format of this request target varies between different HTTP methods. It can be
2. The _request target_, usually a {{glossary("URL")}}, or the absolute path of the protocol, port, and domain are usually characterized by the request context. The format of this request target varies between different HTTP methods. It can be:

- An absolute path, ultimately followed by a `'?'` and query string. This is the most common form, known as the _origin form_, and is used with `GET`, `POST`, `HEAD`, and `OPTIONS` methods.
- `POST / HTTP/1.1`
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