Do not trust MS Word

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MS Word can play tricks with you if you set it on auto correction.I faced it recently when I wrote RAJAMA and MS Word converted it into PAJAMA. Being a careless guy, I did not re-check it and once submitted and published, I could see it easily. Therefore, be careful and remove auto correction immediately. Doing checking manually would save you from embarrassment . Have you any similar experiences? :ohmy:

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Let me tell its advantage....
But I don't know where is that autocorrect option in new versions....just check it.

If you want to type a long word frequently for your article, you can make use of that autocorrect option.
For example...organization is a lengthy word. Just go to that option and provide 'o' instead of organization. (Earlier, we used to do so. Now, I can't find where that option is. Just search).
So, whenever you type 'o' it will be autocorrected as 'organization', which can save a lot of time. Later, when you find it's not needed, remove that entry from the list.
Yes auto correction are there and we should follow this as those words may be corrected according to their list.


That is right but one has to be careful because the words in other languages confuse them and they convert them to as per their dictionary. If we are not careful enough Rajama becomes Pajama.


That's because Pajama is an accepted English word and Rajama is not, so MS Word will autocorrect such words. In any case, it is prudent to never rely completely on any software and best option is to give the entire article a careful read through to avoid such errors!


Actually, what's this Rajama :blink: :blink:
Is it Rajamma....a common South Indian name? :woohoo:


It snot Rajamma, Sandhya, Just single M, it is a common word for kidney beans!
Yes auto correction are there and we should follow this as those words may be corrected according to their list.


That is right but one has to be careful because the words in other languages confuse them and they convert them to as per their dictionary. If we are not careful enough Rajama becomes Pajama.


That's because Pajama is an accepted English word and Rajama is not, so MS Word will autocorrect such words. In any case, it is prudent to never rely completely on any software and best option is to give the entire article a careful read through to avoid such errors!


Actually, what's this Rajama :blink: :blink:
Is it Rajamma....a common South Indian name? :woohoo:


It snot Rajamma, Sandhya, Just single M, it is a common word for kidney beans!


Yes, Rajma, I know that :) . But Sunil is telling about Rajama. :woohoo:
Sunil, are you there? :cheer:
Yes auto correction are there and we should follow this as those words may be corrected according to their list.


That is right but one has to be careful because the words in other languages confuse them and they convert them to as per their dictionary. If we are not careful enough Rajama becomes Pajama.


That's because Pajama is an accepted English word and Rajama is not, so MS Word will autocorrect such words. In any case, it is prudent to never rely completely on any software and best option is to give the entire article a careful read through to avoid such errors!


Actually, what's this Rajama :blink: :blink:
Is it Rajamma....a common South Indian name? :woohoo:



It snot Rajamma, Sandhya, Just single M, it is a common word for kidney beans!


Yes, Rajma, I know that :) . But Sunil is telling about Rajama. :woohoo:
Sunil, are you there? :cheer:


Well, you know sunil and his typo errors!! :lol:
Yes auto correction are there and we should follow this as those words may be corrected according to their list.


That is right but one has to be careful because the words in other languages confuse them and they convert them to as per their dictionary. If we are not careful enough Rajama becomes Pajama.


That's because Pajama is an accepted English word and Rajama is not, so MS Word will autocorrect such words. In any case, it is prudent to never rely completely on any software and best option is to give the entire article a careful read through to avoid such errors!


Actually, what's this Rajama :blink: :blink:
Is it Rajamma....a common South Indian name? :woohoo:



It snot Rajamma, Sandhya, Just single M, it is a common word for kidney beans!


Yes, Rajma, I know that :) . But Sunil is telling about Rajama. :woohoo:
Sunil, are you there? :cheer:


Well, you know sunil and his typo errors!! :lol:

and he feels it's the duty of moderators to correct his mistakes. :laugh: :laugh: Now, what's he going to say? Now, he is also a moderator :cheer:
MS Word can play tricks with you if you set it on auto correction.I faced it recently when I wrote RAJAMA and MS Word converted it into PAJAMA. Being a careless guy, I did not re-check it and once submitted and published, I could see it easily. Therefore, be careful and remove auto correction immediately. Doing checking manually would save you from embarrassment . Have you any similar experiences? :ohmy:


The spellings of Hindi words like 'Rajama' are not in dictionary. There is a way. You mad add such words to M.S. word dictionary.
Yes auto correction are there and we should follow this as those words may be corrected according to their list.


That is right but one has to be careful because the words in other languages confuse them and they convert them to as per their dictionary. If we are not careful enough Rajama becomes Pajama.


That's because Pajama is an accepted English word and Rajama is not, so MS Word will autocorrect such words. In any case, it is prudent to never rely completely on any software and best option is to give the entire article a careful read through to avoid such errors!


Actually, what's this Rajama :blink: :blink:
Is it Rajamma....a common South Indian name? :woohoo:



It snot Rajamma, Sandhya, Just single M, it is a common word for kidney beans!


Yes, Rajma, I know that :) . But Sunil is telling about Rajama. :woohoo:
Sunil, are you there? :cheer:


Well, you know sunil and his typo errors!! :lol:

and he feels it's the duty of moderators to correct his mistakes. :laugh: :laugh: Now, what's he going to say? Now, he is also a moderator :cheer:


Now there are two options available for me.
1- I make it a rule to follow as per my own spellings for every one
2- You must take my spelling that could be either Rajama or Rajma since its not a standard English word. What would you have? Rajama or Rajma? Fried in Ghee or butter?? :laugh: :laugh:
Yes auto correction are there and we should follow this as those words may be corrected according to their list.


That is right but one has to be careful because the words in other languages confuse them and they convert them to as per their dictionary. If we are not careful enough Rajama becomes Pajama.


That's because Pajama is an accepted English word and Rajama is not, so MS Word will autocorrect such words. In any case, it is prudent to never rely completely on any software and best option is to give the entire article a careful read through to avoid such errors!


Actually, what's this Rajama :blink: :blink:
Is it Rajamma....a common South Indian name? :woohoo:



It snot Rajamma, Sandhya, Just single M, it is a common word for kidney beans!


Yes, Rajma, I know that :) . But Sunil is telling about Rajama. :woohoo:
Sunil, are you there? :cheer:


Well, you know sunil and his typo errors!! :lol:


You are soon in for a dictionary named
'spellings sunny's ways'
written by suny bhai. :laugh: :laugh:
I shall modify all the non standard English words used by Indians in my own style.
May be the the day I publish it the name would enter into the history books
Suny bhai who introduced a new script to poor Indians
Long live suny bhai :woohoo: :woohoo: :laugh:
Yes auto correction are there and we should follow this as those words may be corrected according to their list.


That is right but one has to be careful because the words in other languages confuse them and they convert them to as per their dictionary. If we are not careful enough Rajama becomes Pajama.


That's because Pajama is an accepted English word and Rajama is not, so MS Word will autocorrect such words. In any case, it is prudent to never rely completely on any software and best option is to give the entire article a careful read through to avoid such errors!


Actually, what's this Rajama :blink: :blink:
Is it Rajamma....a common South Indian name? :woohoo:



It snot Rajamma, Sandhya, Just single M, it is a common word for kidney beans!


Yes, Rajma, I know that :) . But Sunil is telling about Rajama. :woohoo:
Sunil, are you there? :cheer:


Well, you know sunil and his typo errors!! :lol:

and he feels it's the duty of moderators to correct his mistakes. :laugh: :laugh: Now, what's he going to say? Now, he is also a moderator :cheer:


Now there are two options available for me.
1- I make it a rule to follow as per my own spellings for every one
2- You must take my spelling that could be either Rajama or Rajma since its not a standard English word. What would you have? Rajama or Rajma? Fried in Ghee or butter?? :laugh: :laugh:

don't worry. I will 'autocorrect' them ;)
I have no experienced of this any before. Auto correction work correctly. Be careful guys.
It has been taught to us from our school days to read the articles or essays many a times even after correction. Yes, MS Word auto correction may do such mistake if it is stored like wise.
MS Word can play tricks with you if you set it on auto correction.I faced it recently when I wrote RAJAMA and MS Word converted it into PAJAMA. Being a careless guy, I did not re-check it and once submitted and published, I could see it easily. Therefore, be careful and remove auto correction immediately. Doing checking manually would save you from embarrassment . Have you any similar experiences? :ohmy:


The spellings of Hindi words like 'Rajama' are not in dictionary. There is a way. You mad add such words to M.S. word dictionary.


I have seen that many hindi words are wrongly corrected when we do auto correct. It is better to do spell check one by one word.
Reading whatever wrote once is a good habit, which reading is known as proof reading. Every writer should make a habit of reading once what they have written, because a small letter may make big mistake. as hello and hell. if you wont type hello to your friend with mistype you type hell, there may be a chance of misunderstanding of the friend. So same way in articles also.
Reading whatever wrote once is a good habit, which reading is known as proof reading. Every writer should make a habit of reading once what they have written, because a small letter may make big mistake. as hello and hell. if you wont type hello to your friend with mistype you type hell, there may be a chance of misunderstanding of the friend. So same way in articles also.

that means, you misunderstood me with that 'hell' message? :silly: :laugh: :laugh:
Reading whatever wrote once is a good habit, which reading is known as proof reading. Every writer should make a habit of reading once what they have written, because a small letter may make big mistake. as hello and hell. if you wont type hello to your friend with mistype you type hell, there may be a chance of misunderstanding of the friend. So same way in articles also.


Sarala Ji I appreciate you for double checking your writings and congratulate you for the same. But spellings from other languages really make a big problem for us. You must have faced this many times I guess.
Reading whatever wrote once is a good habit, which reading is known as proof reading. Every writer should make a habit of reading once what they have written, because a small letter may make big mistake. as hello and hell. if you wont type hello to your friend with mistype you type hell, there may be a chance of misunderstanding of the friend. So same way in articles also.


Sarala Ji I appreciate you for double checking your writings and congratulate you for the same. But spellings from other languages really make a big problem for us. You must have faced this many times I guess.


I am suffering a lot while writing my Malayalam festival articles...... :woohoo: :woohoo: :woohoo:
Many words, you can't find in any English dictionary :woohoo: :laugh: :laugh:
Perhaps I may start a new dictionary :silly:
Last 11 articles I submitted, i didn't get enough time to proof read. Poor readers....... :woohoo: :woohoo:
I could have made them more impressive if I spent a little more time. :huh: Also, my eyes...so I left the task :)
MS Word can play tricks with you if you set it on auto correction.I faced it recently when I wrote RAJAMA and MS Word converted it into PAJAMA. Being a careless guy, I did not re-check it and once submitted and published, I could see it easily. Therefore, be careful and remove auto correction immediately. Doing checking manually would save you from embarrassment . Have you any similar experiences? :ohmy:


The spellings of Hindi words like 'Rajama' are not in dictionary. There is a way. You mad add such words to M.S. word dictionary.


I have seen that many hindi words are wrongly corrected when we do auto correct. It is better to do spell check one by one word.


This is because spell checker does not recognize non English word. If you use some non standard words- non English too often, you may add these to M.S. word dictionary. You will get this option after right clicking.
MS Word can play tricks with you if you set it on auto correction.I faced it recently when I wrote RAJAMA and MS Word converted it into PAJAMA. Being a careless guy, I did not re-check it and once submitted and published, I could see it easily. Therefore, be careful and remove auto correction immediately. Doing checking manually would save you from embarrassment . Have you any similar experiences? :ohmy:


The spellings of Hindi words like 'Rajama' are not in dictionary. There is a way. You mad add such words to M.S. word dictionary.


I have seen that many hindi words are wrongly corrected when we do auto correct. It is better to do spell check one by one word.


This is because spell checker does not recognize non English word. If you use some non standard words- non English too often, you may add these to M.S. word dictionary. You will get this option after right clicking.


We generally do it if we have to repeat it in future. However, I did not add it in dictionary as I do not write recipes type articles. Rajama/rajma was for single use only and it played its trick on me. I was surprised while I did not see a red line under it but taking it a normal thing I went on to write further in the flow.
that means sunil you wont do proof reading after writing an article, am i Right?

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suni51

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Created Wednesday, 10 October 2012 04:17
Last Updated Tuesday, 30 November -0001 00:00
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