-Using the \q{Import} command from the \q{Conversions} menu, PuTTYgen
-can load SSH2 private keys in OpenSSH's format and \cw{ssh.com}'s
-format. Once you have loaded one of these key types, you can then
-save it back out as a PuTTY-format key so that you can use it with
-PuTTY. The passphrase will be unchanged by this process (unless you
-deliberately change it). You may want to change the key comment
-before you save the key, since OpenSSH's SSH2 key format contains no
-space for a comment and \cw{ssh.com}'s default comment format is
-long and verbose.
-
-PuTTYgen can also export private keys in OpenSSH format and in
+Using the \I{importing keys}\q{Import} command from the \q{Conversions}
+menu, PuTTYgen can load SSH-2 private keys in OpenSSH's format and
+\cw{ssh.com}'s format. Once you have loaded one of these key types, you
+can then save it back out as a PuTTY-format key (\c{*.\i{PPK}}) so that
+you can use it with the PuTTY suite. The passphrase will be unchanged by this
+process (unless you deliberately change it). You may want to change
+the key comment before you save the key, since OpenSSH's SSH-2 key
+format contains no space for a comment and \cw{ssh.com}'s default
+comment format is long and verbose.
+
+PuTTYgen can also \i{export private keys} in OpenSSH format and in