'Old' vs. 'New' Spelling in French: A new Speller based on the French Spelling Reform
A few months ago, we released a brand-new French spell-checker for Office 2003 users (it was integrated into Service Pack 2 in September 2005). One of the main features of this new tool was that it now takes into account the French spelling reform, which is recommended by official bodies such as the Académie Française, the Conseil supérieur de la langue française, etc. I have discussed the various changes as well as the quality label we received for this tool on our other blog, so I won’t do it again here.
The official texts make it clear that both the traditional (‘old’) spelling and the ‘new’ spelling are valid. The default setting therefore accepts both forms. However, we had provided a separate dialog box to enable users to select the flavor they would like to use in the French texts if they wanted to change this default configuration.
If you install the Beta 2 version of Office 2007, you will notice that you no longer need to download this distinct dialog box. All this is now directly integrated into the Proofing options:
Click on the Office button in the upper left corner of your Word window, then on “Word Options” , and finally on “Proofing” . The menu for French modes will enable you to choose one of the three options, as illustrated below:
The three options enable you to:
(a) consider the old and new forms as valid (which is the default option)
(b) apply only the traditional (‘old’) spelling (i.e. ‘new’ forms will be red-squiggled)
(c) apply the ‘new’ (rectified) spelling only (i.e. the ‘old’ forms will be red-squiggled)
This is definitely easier than in Office 2003 Service Pack 2.
-- Thierry Fontenelle (Program Manager)
Comments
Anonymous
August 25, 2006
[An English version of this post is available here, on the Microsoft Office Natural Language team blog]...Anonymous
October 20, 2006
A few days ago, a Dutch-speaking school from Gent, in Belgium, asked us whether the Dutch spell-checkerAnonymous
November 26, 2006
My colleagues from the Speech group have blogged rather extensively about Speech recognition in VistaAnonymous
August 28, 2007
[An English version of this post is available here , on the Microsoft Office Natural Language team blogAnonymous
November 10, 2007
For readers who are interested in the French spelling reform, two very recent articles published in CanadianAnonymous
November 10, 2007
For readers who are interested in the French spelling reform, two very recent articles published in CanadianAnonymous
November 10, 2007
PingBack from http://msdnrss.thecoderblogs.com/2007/11/10/the-french-spelling-reform-in-the-canadian-press/Anonymous
November 19, 2007
Forum , a weekly magazine published by the University of Montreal, published an interesting article aboutAnonymous
November 19, 2007
Forum , a weekly magazine published by the University of Montreal, published an interesting article aboutAnonymous
January 20, 2008
Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac was released this week. Users who are interested in the French languageAnonymous
January 20, 2008
Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac was released this week. Users who are interested in the French languageAnonymous
December 21, 2008
How do I add the availability of corrrection of spelling when I write in FrenchAnonymous
December 21, 2008
The comment has been removed