Word Processing Programs
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- amybo82
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Word Processing Programs
"The author explains his theory that, like water and food, love is an essential nutrient of life." Word is telling me that it should either say "...theory that, like water and food, loves..." or "theories that, like water and food, love..." I think what I've typed is correct. What do you think?
Another one I've noticed is the use of a semicolon. Sometimes when I use one, Word will underline it and say, "reconsider use of semicolon."
Does anyone else have issues like these?
- bookowlie
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- gali
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I also think that the phrase you wrote is correct.
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My grammar check usually doesn't come on--I may have different settings--but often it tries to get me to change fold. (I fold the sheets. It'll try to make me change it to I told the sheets.) (HA HA, yeah, I talk to my bedsheets.)
I love the auto-correct feature, 'cause I'm a horrible typist! More often than not, when I mix up letters, it fixes it!
BTW, speaking of another thread on this same forum, BookOwlie used the British spelling of judgement!! (English is judgment!!)

- amybo82
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- DennisK
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The author explains that his theory loves ….. a verb
The author explains the his theory has many loves … a noun
Yuk! How can anyone code those kinds of subtleties in a program? You will need an IBM super computer for that. This reminds me of those security blocks that asks the user to enter the characters of an image of letters and numbers that are misaligned – only the human brain can manage that.
- bookowlie
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I always knew either spelling was acceptable. Another one is traveled/travelled. I always use the travelled spelling. Should I start drinking English Breakfast tea?zeldas_lullaby wrote:Yeah, I liked your sentence. When I use Microsoft Word and it underlines a word and says it's not in the dictionary, I look it up online (usually on dictionary.com, although I wish there were a better site!! Too many ads that slow down my computer). Anyway, if dictionary.com says it's a word, then I right-click it on MSWord and choose, "Add it to the dictionary."
My grammar check usually doesn't come on--I may have different settings--but often it tries to get me to change fold. (I fold the sheets. It'll try to make me change it to I told the sheets.) (HA HA, yeah, I talk to my bedsheets.)
I love the auto-correct feature, 'cause I'm a horrible typist! More often than not, when I mix up letters, it fixes it!
BTW, speaking of another thread on this same forum, BookOwlie used the British spelling of judgement!! (English is judgment!!)

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I too prefer judgement and travelled. (They follow spelling rules better than judgment and traveled do.) I'm a huge fan of British spelling!!
-- 08 Jul 2015, 21:47 --
To Amybo:
You could probably turn off that grammar feature...? My MSWord never does that! (I use Microsoft Office Word 2007.)
- Scott
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With that said, the quality of the grammar and spelling dictionaries seem to be about the same to me.
Anyway... computer grammar and spelling checkers, at least with today's technology, are just assistants especially on the grammar side. A human person knows better than the grammar checker. The grammar checker acts more like a suggestion/highlighting tool that one can use while proofreading making it easier to spot your own mistakes.
We speak and write in informal languages. Applying grammar "rules" to an informal language--even in so-called technical or formal writing--requires a certain finesse that at this time is still uniquely human. Computer code is formal and cannot contain equivocation; it's literally binary.

The cool thing is the simple binary rule programmed into the grammar checker would usually be correct which we can pretty much figure out as something like:
- WRONG: The noun verbs his noun that, irrelevant subclause, verb
SHOULD BE EITHER:
A: The noun verb his noun that, irrelevant subclause, verb
OR
B: The noun verbs his noun that, irrelevant subclause, verbs
Well I'll stop writing things now. I just wanted an excuse to complain about Word without being totally off-topic.
"Non ignara mali miseris succurrere disco." Virgil, The Aeneid
- DennisK
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- amybo82
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DennisK-I used OpenOffice for a long time, but when I went back to school to pursue my Master's degree, I had to switch back to Word. There were many things that I had to do that just weren't compatible with Open Office.
I also sometimes use Pages that came installed on my computer, phone, tablet, etc. I like it, but I sometimes have compatibility issues if I'm trying to collaborate with someone else.
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Also, Scott, your post went straight over my head. You must be a freakalutin' computer and grammatical genius. I don't understand about open source software or irrelevant subclauses.
Anyways, are you all suggesting that MS Word is like virus protection, in that you have to keep renewing it? Because I haven't had to do that!
- amybo82
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OK, now I understand.
Thanks!!
- DennisK
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