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Basic Concepts - Introduction

Understanding styles

Tips for understanding styles in Microsoft Word

How to apply a style

How to apply a style using the keyboard in Microsoft Word 2007

How to modify a style

How to reinstate the Styles combo box in Word 2007

How styles in Word cascade

Why does Word sometimes override bold and italics when I apply a paragraph style, but sometimes it does not?

Why I don't use Custom Table Styles

Keep a figure on the same page as its caption

Is your image slipping? How to get your images to stand still

Create a glossary

How the Styles and Formatting Pane works

Why does text change format when I copy it into another document?

How Paste Options works

Letters are missing in my watermark when I print

How to tell Word to use Australian English or other non-US form of English

Control bullets

Create numbered headings

Number headings and figures in Appendixes

Why use Word's built-in heading styles?

Create a table of contents

How Document Map works

Relationship between documents and templates

Attaching a template to a document

How to copy a chart from Excel into a Word document

Insert an Excel chart or worksheet into a landscape page

How to create a hyperlink from a Word document to an Excel workbook

What happens when I send my document to someone else?

How does Track Changes work?

How to use the Reviewing Toolbar in Microsoft Word 2002 and Word 2003

Control how a Word document opens from the internet or an intranet

CompleteWordCount

How to get Word to automatically fill the Edit > Find and Edit > Replace boxes with the selected text

Office 2007 information

Trivia

Contents of this site

Getting help, asking questions

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Word

How to tell Word to use Australian English or other non-US form of English

Quick Reference

Quick Reference: How to tell Word to use a non-US form of English

You must set your preferred language in four places:

  1. in the Windows Control panel, in the Regional Options dialog
  2. in the Windows Control panel, as the Default Input Language
  3. in the Microsoft Office Language Settings Tool
  4. in Word.

Word is obsessed with US English, but it can be made to work in other languages and other forms of English.

It's a fair guess that 95% of the world's population1 does not want a new document in Word to start out in US English.

It's important to set the language of text in a Word document because the language affects the spell checker.

I'm in Australia, so this page is about setting up Word for Australian English. Use the same approach to choose English English or Canadian English or Jamaican English or any other flavour of English.

(These instructions will even work if you need a combination of languages. Let's say you have an Italian language version of Windows but you live in Australia. In that case, set the input language (that is, the keyboard language) to Italian, but tell Windows to use Australian date, time and currency settings. Just make sure you set all four settings the way you want them. Be patient! It's no harder to set up than, let's say, landing an aeroplane.)

Why bother setting up Word's language correctly?

If you're an Australian doing a tender for a potential customer with offices in Maribyrnong and Woolloomooloo and Parramatta and Toowoomba, you need to get these names correct.

But if your assistant grew up in Sydney, he might not know how to spell Maribyrnong. If he grew up in Melbourne, he might not know how to spell Woolloomooloo.

If you have Word set up properly, Word's Australian English dictionary will not only recognize Marybirnong as a misspelling, it will proffer the correct spelling as an alternative. Right-click the misspelling and choose the correct word (Figure 1).

Right-click a spelling mistake such as Marybirynong and Word will offer the correct spelling

Figure 1: When you set up the language correctly, Word will offer the correct spelling for place names.

How to set up Word to use (eg) Australian English

To get Word to default to (eg) Australian English, you must set four (yes, four) settings:

Step 1. In Windows, in the Control Panel, go to Regional and Language Settings. On the Regional Options tab, choose your language.

Step 2. Still in the Regional and Languages Settings, on the Languages tab, click the Details button. Set the Default Input Language to the language of your choice. In the Installed services box, delete any language you don't want. (Note that for, eg, Australian English, the Keyboard setting will still be in the US. That's OK. That's just the way it is.)

Step 3. Do Start > All Programs > Microsoft Office > Microsoft Office Tools. Find the Language Settings tool. Choose the language you want, and delete all other languages.

Step 4. Start Word. If it does not open with a blank document, do ctrl-n to create a new document.

Word language dialog box. You can't delete US English, but make sure you have selected the language you want.

Figure 2 Language dialog box. You can't delete US English. Just make sure your preferred language is selected.

For further information, see Cindy Meister's web site on changing languages.

I'm still having problems!

There are three common problems or confusions you are likely to experience.

US English keeps appearing in my documents

No matter how carefully you set up Word's language, you are likely to find US English creeping into your documents.

This may happen if you copy and paste from somewhere else: either from a website or from another document where the text is set up to use US English.

The only way to avoid that is to use Edit > Paste Special and paste as unformatted text.

"Word spells words like 'organize' with American spelling"

In Australian English, Word will mark 'center' and 'color' as errors, but it accepts both 'organize' and 'organise' as correct.

Many Australians spell words like 'organize' with -ise. But the dictionaries prefer -ize.

I think I'm right in saying that the Macquarie Dictionary (which has become a kind of de facto standard of Australian English) uses both, but prefers -ize.

There is no entry in the Oxford English Dictionary for 'organise' or 'agonise' or similar -ise words. The OED says:

"...in modern French the suffix has become -iser.... But the suffix itself ... is in its origin the Greek [ ], Latin -izare; and, as the pronunciation is also with z, there is no reason why in English the special French spelling should be followed, in opposition to that which is at once etymological and phonetic. In this Dictionary the termination is uniformly written -ize."

Given that lots of people use -ise, but the main dictionaries either use or prefer -ize, I guess it's reasonable for Word to allow both as correct.

For what it's worth, my understanding (largely based on the etymologies in the big OED) is that the British had one of their routine love affairs with the French in the 19th century. It was then that the Brits abandoned the -ize words in favour of the French -ise. About the same time, they stuck an extra 'me' on the end of program to make the truly awful 'programme'. (As far as I know, we don't have telegrammes or anagrammes, for example!)

So 'organise' and 'programme' are French spellings. The real "British" spellings are 'organize' and 'program'. But the Americans had long since left home with the old British spellings before the British adopted French spellings. And so today many people see the -ize spelling as American!

Word keeps trying to complete dates for me

If you have set up (eg) Australian English, and you type a full date in the current year (eg '4 February 2008') you may see a yellow box appear that presents the date in yyyy-mm-dd format followed by the instruction 'Press ENTER to insert' (Figure 3).

Word tries to 'complete' dates for you

Figure 3: AutoComplete of dates

Bug If you press Enter at that point you will end up with '4 February 2008-02-04'.

There is no way to avoid this except to be careful.

"Word's spell checker didn't correct my spelling. It doesn't work properly."

Look over Garbage In, Garbage Out: Errors Caused by Over-Reliance on Spelling Checkers by Sean Igo. It's the sanest piece of writing about spell checkers that I've read in years.

 

1. Total world population = 6.6bn. Population of USA = 300 million. Proportion of population that is from the USA: 4.6%. Source: Wikipedia.