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 Grammar: Diacritics: The Squiggly Marks Above and Below a Letter
Grammar Author: Jan K

You've seen those funny looking punctuation-type symbols that appear above and below letters in a name or word---and you've always wondered what they were. Well, wonder no longer...they are diacritics.
Posted by Rose on Tuesday, December 04 @ 21:49:26 EST (802 reads)
( | Score: 0)
 Grammar: How To Reset Spellchecker to Recheck Your Text
Grammar Author:Jan K

After you have written a text and run spellcheck, you might find it necessary to go back and revise the document. You might also have found that you have been running spellcheck, your brain has gotten a little numb, and you can't remember if you actually fixed the last error or just "Ignore" automatically. You'll need to re-set your spellchecker so that it will recheck the entire document, not just new text that is added.
Posted by Rose on Tuesday, April 24 @ 21:57:12 EDT (1361 reads)
( | Score: 5)
 Grammar: And secondly...
Grammar Author:Jan K

OK, the grammar rules indicate that by putting an "ly" ending on a word, you can transform that word into an adjective that modifies the following subject so that it is "like" the root word of the adjective.
Posted by Rose on Thursday, January 18 @ 13:46:34 EST (1985 reads)
( | Score: 5)
 Grammar: More About Macros
Grammar JanProofer writes "Jan K The 

Proofer

By Jan K






Now that you are working with macros, you might need to know how to edit (or change) a macro you've already created, or how to delete a macro that you are no longer using. This tutorial will give you the easy steps for editing or deleting a macro, along with illustrated instructions that show the computer screens you'll be working with. "
Posted by Rose on Wednesday, October 12 @ 22:58:38 EDT (1482 reads)
( | Score: 0)
 Grammar: Are You Typing the Same Thing Over and Over Again? Run a Macro!
Grammar JanProofer writes "Jan K The Proofer

By Jan K






There are many words or phrases that you probably type again and again, whether it is simply your name or the name of your company, a phrase that you use repeatedly in a school or research paper, or some other string of words that is repeated frequently in one or more documents. Instead of actually typing it, you can run a macro!"
Posted by Rose on Tuesday, October 04 @ 19:14:18 EDT (1497 reads)
( | Score: 3.4)

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