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message 1: by Charles (new)

Charles Hash | 1054 comments One of my worst habits is leaving double words in the text when I edit. I do do it it all all the the time time it it seems seems.

So in OpenOffice, this is the search string that will pull up double words using ctrl+f:

\b(\w+)\s+\1\b

I am trying to figure out how to do this for those that use Word, but am having no luck. Anyone?


message 2: by G.G. (new)

G.G. (ggatcheson) | 2491 comments AH I don't use openOffice but thanks for the trick. I know this should help a lot of people. :)

In Word, mine always underline the second word. I'd be more worried to leave words like 'the' when you change things like the man for 'he'.


message 3: by Martin (new)

Martin Wilsey | 447 comments I have the MSWord plug-in for Grammarly. That flags double words.


message 4: by Quoleena (new)

Quoleena Sbrocca (qjsbrocca) When I do that in Word, it underlines the repeat in red, like it does with incorrect spellings. I'm using Word 2010. Which version do you have?


message 5: by Charles (new)

Charles Hash | 1054 comments Nice. That's why I couldn't find out much about it. There's probably a plug in that does the same for OpenOffice.


message 6: by Dwayne, Head of Lettuce (new)

Dwayne Fry | 4443 comments Mod
My spell check catches my double words. Which can be a blessing. And a curse. When editing a novel that takes place at Christmas time, the spell check likes to stop and point at every "ho ho ho" and "fa la la la la".


message 7: by G.G. (new)

G.G. (ggatcheson) | 2491 comments Dwayne wrote: "My spell check catches my double words. Which can be a blessing. And a curse. When editing a novel that takes place at Christmas time, the spell check likes to stop and point at every "ho ho ho" an..."

lol


message 8: by Micah (last edited Dec 15, 2015 03:15PM) (new)

Micah Sisk (micahrsisk) | 1042 comments Dwayne wrote: "My spell check catches my double words. Which can be a blessing. And a curse. When editing a novel that takes place at Christmas time, the spell check likes to stop and point at every "ho ho ho" an..."

However it won't flag ho-ho-ho or fa-la-la or even now, now, now.

Punctuation is magical.


message 9: by Micah (new)

Micah Sisk (micahrsisk) | 1042 comments I have more trouble with homonyms.

I don't have trouble usually with classics like to, too, and two ore there, their, and they're ... but some others I have trouble with **cough**


message 10: by Charles (new)

Charles Hash | 1054 comments When you're dealing with as many made up words as I do, you end up blocking out the squiggly red lines 99% of the time.


message 11: by G.G. (new)

G.G. (ggatcheson) | 2491 comments Ever thought about adding them to your personal dictionary? That's what I did for names, foreign words (my protagonist is from another planet), and other oddities like ain't, gonna, etc for dialogues.


message 12: by Charles (new)

Charles Hash | 1054 comments i think i tried that and it didn't stick


message 13: by G.G. (new)

G.G. (ggatcheson) | 2491 comments Strange...mine does.


message 14: by Christina (new)

Christina McMullen (cmcmullen) There's all kinds of advanced settings you can enable and disable in Word's spell check, so you can set it to specifically pick up the double words. There's also an advanced filter tab on the find tool as well.


message 15: by [deleted user] (new)

One of the most annoying to keep fixing is things like "...that she had had once before."


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