Word Options is the place where you customise the look of your Word document, how it corrects your words as you type away, the spell checker, your initials on any comments and the document properties, etc. It’s a great place to explore and enables you to customise Word and get it exactly how you want it. However, it does work slightly differently in the three most commonly used versions of Word for PC: Word 2007, Word 2010 and Word 2013, so here’s a quick guide to how to access Word Options in these different versions of Word. Liz, There used to be a way in Word/Office 97 to select a paragraph/section of text and indicate that one did not want the text to be ‘spell checked’. Lets call it un-spellchecked. ? I remember it used to be very easy. It was something like: right click, select spell check, then tick a check box to indicate the selected text should not have spell checking applied. It must have taken less than 5 seconds to do this. Best free ram cleaner. I used to do this alot when writing/editing program specifications where code extracts were included in the text. The spell checker would always highlight the variables which typically were not in the dictionary. The red squiggly underlines made it very difficult to see the code. I have recently tried doing the same in Office/Word 2010. Click the “Radio Button” icon, which will insert a radio button into the Word document. Highlight the “OptionButton Object” and select the “Edit” option, which will enable you. Radio Buttons in Word Document in MAC Office 2016 Hello, I want to create a form with radio buttons in Mac ( Office 2016) but I cant find option to create it. Any suggestions. After several attempts I finally managed it but it took me ages to figure it out. I had to select a temporary style and set the style to not spell check, or something. I then tried using the format painter to select other sections which needed ‘un-spellchecking’ but that did not work. As for taking 5 seconds? 5 minutes would be optimistic! Have you come across this problem? If so, is there a better solution. Hello Ben, and thanks for your question. The only way I can think to do this is to highlight the paragraph (or paragraphs, holding down the control key) and then click on the language at the bottom of your screen (or choose Review – Set Language – Set Proofing Language; if you want to get the language showing at the bottom of the screen, left-click on the bottom tool bar and choose to display language, if that doesn’t work, see this post ). Once you have the language choices displaying, tick your language and tick “Do not check grammar and spelling”. That should mark all of the text you highlighted such that the spell checker avoids it. Wii emulator mac games download. I hope that works for you and takes less than 5 minutes – do let me know! Liz, I read the post linked above and I think it addresses the problem so Thanks. However, for some reason on my version of Office 2010 the Language option was not appearing at the bottom of the window. I had previously googled* several explanations which described a similar approach to yours. I wondered if the reason for this was possibly because my setup only included 1 language (UK English). I added US English and Spanish to the list (as not enabled). This seems to make the Language option appear at the bottom of the screen. Now I can click on the Language option and it takes about 5 seconds again.
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