How can one set a symbol, such as greek letter "pi," to be identif

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as a noun, specifically "Plaintiff," in Word? I have already set up my
shortcuts to insert and/or replace Plaintiff with "pi" symbol, but Word does
not recognize this symbol as a noun and I constantly recieve the green and/or
red underlining grammar errors b/c of this setting. Can I identify this
symbol to word as a noun, or as the specific word "plaintiff?" Same thing for
"delta" symbol and "Defendant."
 
Hello William
as a noun, specifically "Plaintiff," in Word? I have already set up my
shortcuts to insert and/or replace Plaintiff with "pi" symbol, but Word does
not recognize this symbol as a noun and I constantly recieve the green and/or
red underlining grammar errors b/c of this setting. Can I identify this
symbol to word as a noun, or as the specific word "plaintiff?" Same thing for
"delta" symbol and "Defendant."

Both spelling/grammer lines should go away if you format those symbols
as "Do not check spelling and grammer" (Tools | Language, depending on
your version of Word). OTOH, do you really need those symbols in the
final text? Sounds like an AutoCorrect-entry to convert "pi" into
"plaintiff" while you type might be an idea, too?

HTH
Robert
 
I think I already told word to ignore, but when it ignore those symbols it
thinks my sentence is screwy and underlines the preceding work with an "order
of words" error. Yes, I am typing very long law school course outlines, and I
much prefer the "pi" and "delta" symbols over the words to conserve space. I
would like to keep the symbols in the final versions. I know how to turn it
off for specific docs, i.e. briefs, ect. where I do not want symbols to
appear.

I do not want Word to stop identifying all "order of word" errors. If it
would just recognize "pi" and "delta" as plaintiff and defendant, it would
stop all of my problems.
 
No you can't do that and substituting a symbol for a word will produce a
sentence that is gibberish as far as the grammar checker is concerned. Turn
the grammar checker off it will not help your thought processes nor help
produce a document that is readable - but on the other hand this seems like
a law course and so I don't suppose that matters ;) You can always run a
separate grammar check later - if you must. It will still see those
sentences as gibberish as I guess will anyone reading the document later.

--
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Graham Mayor - Word MVP

My web site www.gmayor.com

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Thanks, Graham. I appreciate your taking the time to answer my question. Best
Regards, - Will Scheil
 

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