

Then, select the text you want to format and apply the appropriate character style for that language. You can repeat these steps for each of the languages you use in the document. The new GermanText style has now been created.

For instance, let's say you wanted to create a character style to be used with your German text. The easiest way to do this is to create character styles for each of your languages. If you do this, then Word knows which spelling dictionaries to use in doing its checking. In other words, format your German text as German, your French text as French, and so on.

You can reduce the number of spelling errors if you format your text to use the languages appropriate to that text. Part of the reason why there are so many spelling errors in your document is because Word is assuming that your prose is all in English when, in fact, you are using multiple languages. Chrys wants to somehow instruct Word that he wants it to display all the errors, even if there are many of them.
#SPELLING AND GRAMMAR CHECK WORD COUNT MICROSOFT WORK MANUAL#
When he opens a document, he often sees a warning that there are "Too Many Spelling or Grammatical Errors to Continue Displaying Them." This is a bother he doesn't want to do a manual spelling check (which the warning says he can do). Chrys constantly works on huge multilingual documents.
