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Is there any way to turn the autocorrect/grammar cues off in Microsoft Word?

I know this may sound a little strange, but I am purposely misspelling some things and using improper grammar in my novel, and it's rather annoying when I'm writing and all I'm seeing is a bunch of red and green squiggly lines under everything. Also, it's been autocorrecting some words.

In general, I guess I'd just like a way for Microsoft Word to stop telling me I'm doing things wrong when I know very well what I'm doing.

Please tell me there's a way to turn this off?

5 Answers

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  • 10 years ago
    Favorite Answer

    If you're deliberately misspelling some words, you're presumably doing it consistently - that is, you always misspell a particular word in the same way. If so, I would add them to the dictionary. That will make it stop underlining them in red, and has the advantage that if you misspell the misspelling (misspell it differently from how you've meant to), it will underline those words.

    If you have a paragraph with a lot of misspellings (say, you're quoting a letter written by someone with a shaky command of English), you can set the language for the paragraph to "none", to tell it not to spellcheck that piece of text. (Normally you would use this if you had some text written in a language other than English - if you have a paragraph in French, say, you can tell Word that it's French, and it will spellcheck that text using a French dictionary instead of the English one. If you set the language to "none", that tells Word not to try spellchecking it.)

    You can tell Word not to highlight grammatical errors. Microsoft keep moving controls around, possibly to keep the people who write the "for dummies" books in business. But in most of the versions of Word I've used, it's on the Tools menu, then Spelling and Grammar. That brings up a horrible big multi-tabbed dialogue box, and somewhere in that is a checkbox labelled something like "Hide grammatical errors in this document." If you check it, all the green lines go away.

    You can be a bit more selective, in that if you right-click a phrase or sentence with a green underline, it offers suggestions for what it thinks you should say. One of the options should be "ignore", which tells it not to highlight any errors caused by violating that rule.

    Controls for autocorrect are also on the Tools menu. I'm not sure if there's a single switch to turn the whole thing off, or whether there are several parts to it that you can turn on and off individually.

  • 10 years ago

    Go on spell check (not just right click, make sure the pop up box opens)

    Click 'Options...' on the bottom left of the box

    Make sure you are on the 'Proofing' tab

    Look under the subheading called 'When correcting spelling and grammar in Word'

    Uncheck the options you don't need

  • 10 years ago

    When in the spell check thingy, click on the Options button in the bottom left corner

    Click Proofing.

    Click to clear the Check spelling as you type check box.

    Click to clear the Check grammar as you type check box.

  • 10 years ago

    Sounds interesting! Unfortunately, I do not think you can turn it off.

    Edit: If you have 2007, eHow has an article on how to turn it off.

    http://www.ehow.com/how_4477521_turn-off-automatic...

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  • Anonymous
    4 years ago

    whilst i desire them to accomplish a particular action, i'm going to apply the interest that maximum suitable fits that action. as an occasion, if i desire them to take a seat down, I say "take a seat"; if i desire them to place down, i take advantage of "lay"; in the event that they leap up on me or yet another concentrated visitor, or if i desire them off the sofa, chair, and so on... i take advantage of "down"; I oftentimes shop my keyword phrases to not greater then 2 words. it somewhat is much less annoying on me, and that i think of it somewhat is much less annoying for the canines. As for going to the restroom, I in basic terms use "potty", and that they the two circulate to the door, take a seat and wait (inspite of the fact that Diva's greater effective on the sitting and arranged then Gibbs, who continues to be studying, lol). whilst it incredibly is time for his or her crate, i take advantage of the "mattress". the two one in each and every of them are nonetheless catching onto this one, lol. different keyword phrases i take advantage of are "come on" whilst it's time to circulate back into the abode; "circulate away it" that's someone-friendly command i take advantage of whilst somebody includes my abode (if the canines bark, and so on... for greater then a pair seconds, I provide the "circulate away it" command), whilst my little ones are ingesting (do no longer ought to apply it plenty in this one because of the fact the canines are oftentimes positioned away as quickly as we've foodstuff out on account that they are the two nonetheless puppies -Diva's the oldest at 9 months so she has somewhat greater freedom whilst we are ingesting- and are nonetheless studying manners whilst the people are ingesting). i'm rather valuable there is different cue words i take advantage of, yet those are those i'm able to think of of off the splendid of my head appropriate now, lol. LG: i might circulate away the crate in one room it somewhat is no longer very severe site visitors. this way, could she recover from whelmed with the interest, desire some down time for herself, and so on... she has get entry to to that along with her crate being in a quieter room. Having a canines mattress interior the front room isn't this variety of undesirable thought the two.

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