
In this case, the most likely scenario is that someone was previously doing a spell check on the document and, when the misspelled word was presented for review, clicked the "Add" button. If you've checked the proofing setting in the Language dialog box and found no problem there, or if the problem of missing misspelled words occurs in more than one document, then the problem is likely with the spelling checker itself. If you are sure that you want the entire document to be proofed, then you should simply select the entire document (press Ctrl+A), display the Language dialog box again, and clear the Do Not Check Spelling or Grammar check box. While you can explicitly change it for this particular instance of the word, you might need to change it a lot of other places in the document, as well. If the setting is not made in the style, then that means that someone specifically turned off the proofing for the particular text. The solution, in that case, is to either use a different style that allows the proofing or change the style so that the style permits proofing. (How you check style settings has been covered in other issues of WordTips.) If the setting is made in the style, then any other text formatted with that style in the document is also skipped during a spelling check. First check to see if this setting is related to whatever style is used to format the selected text. You now need to figure out how pervasive the "no proofing" or "do not check" setting is within the document. Go ahead and dismiss the Language dialog box for now. Don't change the setting yet you still have some detective work to figure out the actual problem. If the setting is turned on, then Word ignores the selected text when checking either spelling or grammar. Look at the Do Not Check Spelling or Grammar check box to see if it contains a check mark. Then display the Review tab of the ribbon and, in the Proofing group, click on Set Language. You can find out if this is the case by first selecting the word that was missed during the spell check. The most common reason is that the text has somehow been formatted so that Word ignores it when checking spelling or grammar. If the problem occurs in only one document or with some occurrences of misspelled words in a particular document, then that means that the problem is with the document itself. There are several reasons why this situation could occur, which means that you need to do some analysis of the problem document (and Word itself) to figure out what is going on. Barbara is wondering why this would happen. If anyone has a working solution for this problem, I would greatly appreciate it. Otherwise, I will just have to resort to using Word 2003 for all of my documents.Barbara related a problem that she ran into with a Word document: She ran a spell check and Word did not detect several misspelled words.

Is 2010, none of the solutions I've discovered so far have been effective. Most forums and support Q&As on this problem relate to Word 2007, but since mine (Would the programīeing part of Office 2010 Starter have anything to do with the issue?) I've also tried going into regedit to delete the "override" key in proofing tools, but it doesn't exist.

#MICROSOFT WORD 2010 SPELL CHECK BUG SOFTWARE#
I cannot uninstall and reinstall the program as it came pre-installed on my computer, and I wouldn't benefit too much from buying Office 2010 software separately. Proofing options are checked, so the spell check is technically turned on. I've researched this problem, but none of the suggestions I've found have worked.


#MICROSOFT WORD 2010 SPELL CHECK BUG WINDOWS 7#
I purchased my new Windows 7 computer a couple months ago, and I've recently realized that the automatic spell check in Word 2010 does not work.
