Pronoun Use
A wavy red line appears under the word
blue line
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.
In the context of educational technology, a wavy red line typically indicates a spelling error or a word that is not recognized by the software's dictionary. On the other hand, a wavy blue line is often used to indicate a grammatical error or a suggestion for better phrasing or word choice. These visual cues are commonly found in word processing programs and text editing tools to help users improve the accuracy and clarity of their writing.
Green wavy underline indicates grammar "mistakes" (you have to turn the grammar correction function on to have Word indicate it has found mistakes)
Some would be... washing, telephone, short, long, thin, blue, red, wavy, jagged, railway.....
A green wavy line under text typically indicates a grammatical error or stylistic suggestion in word processing software. This feature helps users identify issues related to sentence structure, punctuation, or word choice that may not be strictly incorrect but could be improved for clarity or fluency. It serves as a tool for enhancing writing quality.
A red wavy line indicates a possible misspelled word.The green wavy line indicates grammar errors or sentence format errors.
No. A red wavy line will appear underneath it.
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.
Accent mark The wavy line (making 'n' into 'nyuh') is called a 'tilde'