=item *
Stringification isn't forced on the test operands.
-However, L</ok> honors C<'bool'> overloading, L</is> and L</is_deeply> honor C<'eq'> overloading (and just that one) and L</cmp_ok> honors whichever overloading category corresponds to the specified operator.
+However, L</ok> honors C<'bool'> overloading, L</is> and L</is_deeply> honor C<'eq'> overloading (and just that one), L</isnt> honors C<'ne'> overloading, and L</cmp_ok> honors whichever overloading category corresponds to the specified operator.
=item *
=head2 C<PERL_TEST_LEANER_USES_TEST_MORE>
If this environment variable is set, L<Test::Leaner> will replace its functions by those from L<Test::More>.
-Moreover, the symbols that are imported you C<use Test::Leaner> will be those from L<Test::More>, but you can still only import the symbols originally defined in L<Test::Leaner> (hence the functions from L<Test::More> that are not implemented in L<Test::Leaner> will not be imported).
+Moreover, the symbols that are imported when you C<use Test::Leaner> will be those from L<Test::More>, but you can still only import the symbols originally defined in L<Test::Leaner> (hence the functions from L<Test::More> that are not implemented in L<Test::Leaner> will not be imported).
If your version of L<Test::More> is too old and doesn't have some symbols (like L</note> or L</done_testing>), they will be replaced in L<Test::Leaner> by croaking stubs.
This may be useful if your L<Test::Leaner>-based test script fails and you want extra diagnostics.