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-rw-r--r--doc/tutorial.md6
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/doc/tutorial.md b/doc/tutorial.md
index 88645a781e8..64a53cab069 100644
--- a/doc/tutorial.md
+++ b/doc/tutorial.md
@@ -616,7 +616,7 @@ literals and most enum variants.
 
 `while` produces a loop that runs as long as its given condition
 (which must have type `bool`) evaluates to true. Inside a loop, the
-keyword `break` can be used to abort the loop, and `again` can be used
+keyword `break` can be used to abort the loop, and `loop` can be used
 to abort the current iteration and continue with the next.
 
 ~~~~
@@ -1564,7 +1564,7 @@ Empty argument lists can be omitted from `do` expressions.
 
 Most iteration in Rust is done with `for` loops. Like `do`,
 `for` is a nice syntax for doing control flow with closures.
-Additionally, within a `for` loop, `break`, `again`, and `return`
+Additionally, within a `for` loop, `break`, `loop`, and `return`
 work just as they do with `while` and `loop`.
 
 Consider again our `each` function, this time improved to
@@ -1599,7 +1599,7 @@ With `for`, functions like `each` can be treated more
 like builtin looping structures. When calling `each`
 in a `for` loop, instead of returning `false` to break
 out of the loop, you just write `break`. To skip ahead
-to the next iteration, write `again`.
+to the next iteration, write `loop`.
 
 ~~~~
 # use each = vec::each;