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How to Make Grammar and Style Settings in Word XP


MS Word XP allows for much greater flexibility in its grammar and style settings. You can adjust parameters from very casual to very strict, reflecting your natural style of writing or setting the editorial standards of your employer.

After these step-by-step instructions for making the settings, there is a description of each individual option.

Word XP Grammar and Style settings

  1. Click Tools for the dropdown menu
  2. Click Options
  3. Click the Spelling and Grammar tab
  4. Check selections on lower left
  5. Choose Grammar Only or Grammar & Style from lower right dropdown box
  6. Click on Settings
  7. Select your preferred level for each of the three Require options.
  8. Check any of the 11 options for Grammar
  9. Check any of the 21 options for Style
  10. Click Okay
  11. Click Okay again
Word XP Grammar and Style settings

Notes about your options:

Require options:

  • Comma required before last list item (always, never, don't check)
    The highest standard is "always."
  • Punctuation required with quotes (inside, outside, don't check)
    The highest standard is "inside."
  • Spaces required between sentences (1, 2, don't check)
    The highest standard is "2."
The following description are directly from the MS Word XP Help files.

Grammar options:

  • Capitalization
    Capitalization problems, such as proper nouns ("Mr. jones" should be "Mr. Jones") or titles that precede proper nouns ("aunt Helen" should be "Aunt Helen"). Also detects overuse of capitalization.

  • Fragments and Run-ons
    Sentence fragments and run-on sentences.

  • Misused words
    Incorrect usage of adjectives and adverbs, comparatives and superlatives, "like" as a conjunction, "nor" versus "or," "what" versus "which," "who" versus "whom," units of measure, conjunctions, prepositions, and pronouns.

  • Negation
    Use of multiple negation.

  • Noun phrases
    Incorrect noun phrases; a/an misuse; number agreement problems in noun phrases ("five machine" instead of "five machines").

  • Possessives and plurals
    Use of a possessive in place of a plural, and vice versa. Also detects omitted apostrophes in possessives.

  • Punctuation
    Incorrect punctuation, including commas, colons, end-of-sentence punctuation, punctuation in quotations, multiple spaces between words, or a semicolon used in place of a comma or colon.

  • Questions
    Non-standard questions such as, "He asked if there was any coffee left?", "Which makes an offer a good solution?", and "She asked did you go after all?".

  • Relative clauses
    Incorrect use of relative pronouns and punctuation, including "who" used in place of "which" to refer to things, "which" used in place of "who" to refer to people, unnecessary use of "that" with "whatever" and "whichever," or "that's" used in place of "whose."

  • Subject-verb agreement
    Disagreement between the subject and its verb, subject-complement agreement, and subject-verb agreement with pronouns and quantifiers (for example, "All of the students has left" instead of "All of the students have left").

  • Verb phrases
    Incorrect verb phrases; incorrect verb tenses; transitive verbs used as intransitive verbs.

    Style options:

  • Clich�?s, Colloquialisms, and Jargon
    Words or phrases identified as clich�?s in the dictionary.
    Sentences that contain colloquial words and phrases, including "real," "awfully," and "plenty" used as adverbs; two consecutive possessives; "get" used as a passive verb; "kind of" used in place of "somewhat"; "scared of" used in place of "afraid of"; and "how come" used in place of "why."
    Use of technical, business, or industry jargon.

  • Contractions
    Use of contractions that should be spelled out or that are considered too informal for a specific writing style �? for example, "We won't leave 'til tomorrow" instead of "We will not leave until tomorrow."

  • Fragment�?�? stylistic suggestions
    Fragments that you might want to avoid in formal writing, such as "A beautiful day!" or "Why?".

  • Gender-specific words
    Gender-specific language, such as "councilman" and "councilwomen."

  • Hyphenated and compound words
    Hyphenated words that should not be hyphenated, and vice versa. Also detects closed compounds that should be open, and vice versa.

  • Misused words�?�? stylistic suggestions
    Nonstandard words such as "ain't" as well as miscellaneous usages such as "angry at" instead of "angry with."

  • Numbers
    Numerals that should be spelled out (use nine instead of 9), and vice versa (use 12 instead of twelve). Also detects incorrect usage of "%" in place of "percentage."

  • Passive sentences
    Sentences written in the passive voice. When possible, the suggestions are rewritten in the active voice.

  • Possessives and plurals�?�? stylistic suggestions
    Questionable but not strictly incorrect possessive usages such as "Her memory is like an elephant's" or "I stopped by John's."

  • Punctuation�?�? stylistic suggestions
    Unneeded commas in date phrases, informal successive punctuation marks, and missing commas before quotations�?�? for example, "She said 'He is due at noon.'"

  • Relative clauses�?�? stylistic suggestions
    Questionable use of "that" or "which."

  • Sentence length (more than sixty words)
    Sentences that include more than 60 words.

  • Sentence structure
    Sentence fragments, run-on sentences, overuse of conjunctions (such as "and" or "or"), nonparallel sentence structure (such as shifts between active and passive voice in a sentence), incorrect sentence structure of questions, and misplaced modifiers.

  • Sentences beginning with "And," "But," and "Hopefully"
    Use of conjunctions and adverbs at the beginning of a sentence, or use of "plus" as a conjunction between two independent clauses.

  • Successive nouns (more than three)
    Strings of several nouns that may be unclear, as in "The income tax office business practices remained the same."

  • Successive prepositional phrases (more than three)
    Strings of prepositional phrases, as in "The book on the shelf in the corner at the library on the edge of town was checked out."

  • Unclear phrasing
    Ambiguous phrasing, such as "more" followed by an adjective and a plural or mass noun ("We need more thorough employees," instead of "We need more employees who are thorough"), or sentences in which there is more than one possible referent for a pronoun ("All of the departments did not file a report" instead of "Not all of the departments filed a report").

  • Use of first person
    Pronouns "I" and "me," which shouldn't be used in scientific or technical writing.

  • Verb phrases�?�? stylistic suggestions
    Use of indicative verb forms where the subjunctive is preferable; split verb phrases; and passive verb phrases�?�? for example, "The pepper is able to be chopped without burning fingers."

  • Wordiness
    Wordy relative clauses or vague modifiers (such as "fairly" or "pretty"), redundant adverbs, too many negatives, the unnecessary use of "or not" in the phrase "whether or not," or the use of "possible �? may" in place of "possible �? will."

  • Words in split infinitives (more than one)
    Two or more words between "to" and an infinitive verb, as in "to very boldly enter the market."