In Microsoft Word, a green wavy line indicates a potential grammatical error, such as a sentence fragment or a punctuation issue. It is a signal for you to review and possibly correct the highlighted text to improve the overall clarity and correctness of your writing.
In Thai, the word "sen" generally means "line" or "queue." It can refer to a line of people waiting for something, a line on a map, or a line in a poem.
The French word 'trait' means dash, line, or stroke. It also may mean feature, or [personality] trait. And it may mean dart or shaft, and even trace.
The affix '-ish' is used to indicate a resemblance or similarity to something. It can convey a sense of being somewhat like the base word, but not exactly the same. For example, "greenish" might mean somewhat green or having a hint of green.
The Maori word for green is "kākāriki."
The word "emerald" can be used before the word "green" to describe a particular shade or type of green.
The word is mispelledA RED squiggly line means the word is misspelled. A GREEN squiggly line means that there is one or more extra space or tab characters that aren't grammatically needed.
Green
The green line means a grammar mistake. The red line means a spelling mistake.
Verdant means green and growing. It is an English word that we adopted from the Spanish word for green: green with grass.
The green line means that your grammar is incorrect. Try right clicking a word above it.
Green
Linea can mean a string, a cord, a fishing-line, a plumb-line, a finishing line in a race.
The word chloroplast means green coloured plastids.
the word virid means bright green with vegetation
When a word is underlined by a red wavy line, it signifies that that word is misspelled.
Word also has a grammar checker that displays a green wavy line below a phrase or sentence when a POSSIBLE grammatical error is detected. Right click the green wavy line to display suggested corrections.
mean or green for moss