Yes, that works (in Microsoft Word at least). For example, a chemical formula might be HCl (hydrogen H, plus chloride Cl), but Word will find the second capital letter suspicious (since that is a common typing error) and change it to Hcl, which in this particular case is wrong. Ctrl-Z will undo the auto-correction.
true
False
False: The printing press was invented in the 15th century by Johannes Gutenberg in Germany.
false
Thts false...i dont know what the correction is thoughThis is false, Britian viewed Georgia as a buffer
That is true.
false
False
False.False.False.False.
False
true
true
no