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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.
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.
Set text line for line is a common phrase in design. This means that you set a default text to the baseline. This can be applied on a document that does not have a text frame.
The green line means a grammar mistake. The red line means a spelling mistake.
It means it (most likely/probably) is a grammar mistake. However, I do think that Microsoft Word (any version) has and can make mistakes with grammar and/or spelling.
It's a nomenclature, not a phrase, for a line of compact pickups produced by General Motors under the Chevrolet marque from 1983 to 2005.
This usually means that the way you have been writing is grammatically incorrect.
It looks for grammar errors in your document. These can be things like structure of sentences, punctuation and errors in grammar. Any that it finds are highlighted by a wavy green line under the part that has an error. It also gives an explanation of the error.
"Are you one of the cheerleaders?" you put you as the subject and are as the predicate. Then you make a diagnal line under cheerleaders (as a modifier) an put "one" on it. After, you do that put your prepostional phrase under you example:. of father is the prepositional phrase! Hope this helped:D:)
Original classified document will have a classified by and reason line and a derivative classified document will have a classified by and derived from line
Original classified document will have a classified by and a reason line and a derivative classified document will have a classified by and a derived from line
If your username is Asker, type: /me like green line! It will show up in green as: Asker like green line!