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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.
A red wavy line indicates a possible misspelled word.The green wavy line indicates grammar errors or sentence format errors.
Green wavy underline indicates grammar "mistakes" (you have to turn the grammar correction function on to have Word indicate it has found mistakes)
Green wavy line
The red underline indicates a spelling error, and the green underline indicates a grammatical error. Note that these programs are not infallible, and it is still up to you to decide if there was really an error.
It depends on which word processing program you use. It is green in several though this is not universal.
The green wavy line in Microsoft Word is used when Word think you make a grammatical mistake. (The red one is used when you make a spelling mistake) There should be an option in the Word, "Check grammar as you type". You can turn it off/on. Adding some Microsoft links with more information.
Unfortunately again this is a question that was not possible to find an accurate answer for. Wavy 10 seems to be a television station based in Norfolk, Virginia. Wavy indicates a line that undulates and is not perfectly straight.
yes
When you automatically check spelling and grammar, Microsoft Word uses wavy red underlines to indicate possible spelling errors and wavy green underlines to indicate possible grammatical errors.Blue wavy underlinesWord uses wavy blue underlines to indicate possible instances of inconsistent formatting.
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.
Red indicates a spelling error. Green indicates a grammar error. The Autocorrect feature and the the Spelling and Grammar checkers are responsible for the lines.