Fix time.time() references in the time module docs

Closes #14842.
diff --git a/Doc/library/time.rst b/Doc/library/time.rst
index 33c2ed7..4ff0ce4 100644
--- a/Doc/library/time.rst
+++ b/Doc/library/time.rst
@@ -71,9 +71,9 @@
   the units in which their value or argument is expressed. E.g. on most Unix
   systems, the clock "ticks" only 50 or 100 times a second.
 
-* On the other hand, the precision of :func:`time` and :func:`sleep` is better
+* On the other hand, the precision of :func:`.time` and :func:`sleep` is better
   than their Unix equivalents: times are expressed as floating point numbers,
-  :func:`time` returns the most accurate time available (using Unix
+  :func:`.time` returns the most accurate time available (using Unix
   :c:func:`gettimeofday` where available), and :func:`sleep` will accept a time
   with a nonzero fraction (Unix :c:func:`select` is used to implement this, where
   available).
@@ -164,7 +164,7 @@
 
    Convert a time expressed in seconds since the epoch to a string representing
    local time. If *secs* is not provided or :const:`None`, the current time as
-   returned by :func:`time` is used.  ``ctime(secs)`` is equivalent to
+   returned by :func:`.time` is used.  ``ctime(secs)`` is equivalent to
    ``asctime(localtime(secs))``. Locale information is not used by :func:`ctime`.
 
    .. versionchanged:: 2.1
@@ -183,7 +183,7 @@
 
    Convert a time expressed in seconds since the epoch to a :class:`struct_time` in
    UTC in which the dst flag is always zero.  If *secs* is not provided or
-   :const:`None`, the current time as returned by :func:`time` is used.  Fractions
+   :const:`None`, the current time as returned by :func:`.time` is used.  Fractions
    of a second are ignored.  See above for a description of the
    :class:`struct_time` object. See :func:`calendar.timegm` for the inverse of this
    function.
@@ -198,7 +198,7 @@
 .. function:: localtime([secs])
 
    Like :func:`gmtime` but converts to local time.  If *secs* is not provided or
-   :const:`None`, the current time as returned by :func:`time` is used.  The dst
+   :const:`None`, the current time as returned by :func:`.time` is used.  The dst
    flag is set to ``1`` when DST applies to the given time.
 
    .. versionchanged:: 2.1
@@ -213,7 +213,7 @@
    This is the inverse function of :func:`localtime`.  Its argument is the
    :class:`struct_time` or full 9-tuple (since the dst flag is needed; use ``-1``
    as the dst flag if it is unknown) which expresses the time in *local* time, not
-   UTC.  It returns a floating point number, for compatibility with :func:`time`.
+   UTC.  It returns a floating point number, for compatibility with :func:`.time`.
    If the input value cannot be represented as a valid time, either
    :exc:`OverflowError` or :exc:`ValueError` will be raised (which depends on
    whether the invalid value is caught by Python or the underlying C libraries).