Nuzhna, On Tue, 2011-05-03 at 16:37 -0700, Nuzhna Pomoshch wrote:
> --- On Sun, 5/1/11, Jean-Francois Nifenecker > <[email protected]> wrote: > > > *this* is strange. Are you sure you have set the correct > > dictionary? Is it listed in the extensions thingy (Tools > > /Extensions manager)? If not, you've won the right for a > > reinstall... :) > > The top entry in the extension manager is "English spelling > and hyphenation dictionaries and thesaurus 2010.03.16". > > > This is the auto-complete process at work (Tools / > > Autocomplete menu), not the language tool. > > OK. > > > What is the language displayed in Format / Character, > > Font thumbnail, Language? > > A-HA! On the working machine (mine), it is "English (USA)". > On one of the non-working machines (can't check the other > one right now), it is "English (New Zealand)" (notably > with no "ABC" and the check mark to the left of it). You > are a genius. :) > > That does lead me to ask a couple of (probably stupid) > questions. In Format / Character, what is the difference > (meaning in the format of the characters that go into the > document) between English (New Zealand) and say English > (Australia) (two countries quite close culturally with > few if any differences in language use and spelling)? > > Obviously, there are some differences between the U.S. > spelling of certain words, and spelling of the same words > in other (English language countries), though I really > don't know anything about the differences between Canada > spelling and U.K. spelling and South Africa spelling and > Australia spelling. So what should I tell the other users > to do? > > 1. Just set the language to English (Australia), which > they won't like, but that's too bad? :) > > 2. Is there actually a New Zealand dictionary for them > to download and install? > > 3. Is there some way of telling the spell checker to > use English (Australia) with the document language set > to English (New Zealand)? > > Any one of those will at least get spell check working. > > Thank you again for your help. > > Nuzhna > The major differences are mostly between US and UK English usage and spelling. (Liter vs litre, favor vs favour). Most other English speaking countries follow UK spellings and somewhat less dramatic usage differences. Many of the usage differences would from loan words borrowed from local languages (Bantu, Maori, Apache - US). Sometimes Canadians will tease Americans about our bad spelling and incorrectly calling the letter Z zee and not zed as in all other Englishing speaking countries. One usage difference between US and UK English - in the US you send a letter in the mail in UK you post a letter in the mail. In general I would probably use US or UK depending on whether most of my work was international or US only. Most native speakers of English are well aware of the differences and will understand the meaning, the context should help make it clear. -- Jay Lozier [email protected] -- Unsubscribe instructions: E-mail to [email protected] Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/www/users/ All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted
