What spellchecking services do you use?

Discussion in 'Copywriting' started by Tailoredfreelancing, Jan 9, 2012.

  1. #1
    When I am writing content for clients, I find that I can eradicate all typos by printing off my writing and proofreading it on paper before submitting it. However, I was wondering if anyone knew any good internet spellchecking services that I could use to increase my productivity and help me save on ink and paper.
     
    Tailoredfreelancing, Jan 9, 2012 IP
  2. awundrin

    awundrin Well-Known Member

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    #2
    Seems pretty 'old school' to be printing and proofing your work on paper. I rely on the spell check function OpenOffice offers.
     
    awundrin, Jan 10, 2012 IP
  3. tjcreation

    tjcreation Peon

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    #3
    I rely on the built-in spellcheckers in OpenOffice and Firefox. However, I don't think there's anything wrong with proofing your work by hand. You want your content to be as nearly perfect as possible before you publish, and no automated spellcheck is infallible. I prefer to manually check my work, but I do it on-screen rather than printing.
     
    tjcreation, Jan 11, 2012 IP
  4. problog

    problog Active Member

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    #4
    I use microsoft office spell check is what I use and it seems pretty good
     
    problog, Jan 11, 2012 IP
  5. jetwork

    jetwork Member

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    #5
    I use ms sometimes even for my posts :)

    Edit: I mean forum posts
     
    jetwork, Jan 13, 2012 IP
  6. YMC

    YMC Well-Known Member

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    #6
    I too go old school for clients. There's just something about reading words on paper that eliminates the scanning that comes from being over-familiar with a piece. I 'see' things better and I've caught a lot of things that spelling and grammar checkers missed.
     
    YMC, Jan 14, 2012 IP
  7. Sam Gilmore

    Sam Gilmore Peon

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    #7
    Firefox comes with an internal spell checker that you can use to your advantage.
    The best solution of course is to use an OCR tool that comes with its own internal spell checker.
    After extracting text from an image with Microsoft Office Document Imaging, you export the text to Microsoft Word. Here you can use the internal spell checker.
     
    Sam Gilmore, Jan 31, 2012 IP
  8. Ella_Z.

    Ella_Z. Peon

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    #8
    I'm used to those one which is in my MS Word. However, this one is also nice http://accuratespelling.com/. But you need to pay for the service.
     
    Ella_Z., Feb 7, 2012 IP
  9. contentboss

    contentboss Peon

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    #9
    http://www.autogrammar.com is launching soon - that not only spellchecks, it grammar checks too, so you can see if your text will pass Google.
     
    contentboss, Feb 7, 2012 IP
  10. ryan_uk

    ryan_uk Illustrious Member

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    #10
    I read through what I've written, then edit accordingly. Sure, I use the spell checker in MS Word (it highlights mistakes as I type and even auto-corrects some), but I rarely make spelling mistakes. I just like to go over texts a few times for grammar and readability purposes. There is software that can calculate the flesch reading ease score (in fact, MS Word can do this, too), but no automated process can beat manual editing to ensure readability.
     
    ryan_uk, Feb 11, 2012 IP
  11. SpyGuyz

    SpyGuyz Active Member

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    #11
    use spell checker progs just google it
     
    SpyGuyz, Feb 12, 2012 IP
  12. dojodesign

    dojodesign Well-Known Member

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    #12
    Most my content is written in a browser (blog, forum) and firefox has a spellchecker itself. Not always perfect, but it does the job. Of course, if I was into professional writing, I'd need something better than this.
     
    dojodesign, Feb 13, 2012 IP
  13. YMC

    YMC Well-Known Member

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    #13
    Define soon.
     
    YMC, Feb 15, 2012 IP
  14. contentboss

    contentboss Peon

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    #14
    not quite as long as 'later'.


    But longer than 'imminently'.
     
    contentboss, Feb 15, 2012 IP
  15. YMC

    YMC Well-Known Member

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    #15
    Ah, clear as mud for such a quick answer. lol
     
    YMC, Feb 15, 2012 IP
  16. odlanor9

    odlanor9 Peon

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    #16
    Good old MS word spell check does the trick.
     
    odlanor9, Feb 15, 2012 IP
  17. Sam Gilmore

    Sam Gilmore Peon

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    #17
    Nothing better was inwented
     
    Sam Gilmore, Feb 16, 2012 IP
  18. contentboss

    contentboss Peon

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    #18
    inwented.... as in "I inwented into teh house avail myself $5 please"
     
    contentboss, Feb 16, 2012 IP
  19. mmm555

    mmm555 Member

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    #19
    I just whatever is used in the browser/program that I am using. Most everything has one these days it seems.
     
    mmm555, Feb 16, 2012 IP
  20. Spoiltdiva

    Spoiltdiva Acclaimed Member

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    #20
    All of the above suggestions are useful.But on occassion I'll refer to my old fashioned dictionary that I have on my workdesk.It not only gives me the correct spelling,but also explains the correct definition of the word.
    Once in awhile it reminds me that I can use a particular word for different meanings and contexts.
     
    Spoiltdiva, Feb 22, 2012 IP