diff --git a/forth.html.markdown b/forth.html.markdown
index b8b751d9..847895c3 100644
--- a/forth.html.markdown
+++ b/forth.html.markdown
@@ -55,6 +55,7 @@ Forth, but most of what is written here should work elsewhere.
2 5 swap / \ swap the top with the second element: 5 / 2
6 4 5 rot .s \ rotate the top 3 elements: 4 5 6
4 0 drop 2 / \ remove the top item (dont print to screen): 4 / 2
+1 2 3 nip .s \ remove the second item (similar to drop): 1 3
\ ---------------------- More Advanced Stack Manipulation ----------------------
@@ -151,7 +152,7 @@ create mynumbers 64 , 9001 , 1337 , \ ok (the last `,` is important!)
\ ...which is equivalent to:
-\ [64, 9001, 1337]
+\ Manually writing values to each index:
64 mynumbers 0 cells + ! \ ok
9001 mynumbers 1 cells + ! \ ok
1337 mynumbers 2 cells + ! \ ok
@@ -159,12 +160,14 @@ create mynumbers 64 , 9001 , 1337 , \ ok (the last `,` is important!)
\ Reading values at certain array indexes:
0 cells mynumbers + ? \ 64 ok
1 cells mynumbers + ? \ 9001 ok
-2 cells mynumbers + ? \ 1337 ok
-\ Of course, you'll probably want to define your own words to manipulate arrays:
-: ?mynumbers ( n -- n ) cells mynumbers + ; \ ok
-64 mynumbers 2 cells + ! \ ok
-2 ?mynumbers ? \ 64 ok
+\ We can simplify it by making a helper word for manipulating arrays:
+: arr ( n n -- n ) cells swap + ;
+mynumbers 2 arr ? \ 1337 ok
+
+\ Which we can use for writing too:
+20 mynumbers 1 arr ! \ ok
+mynumbers 1 arr ? \ 20 ok
\ ------------------------------ The Return Stack ------------------------------