A Gift to Writers

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It's/its, your's/yours, to/too/two, etc. A writer's macro.
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It's/its, your's/yours, to/too/two, etc.

I've learned a lot writing for Literotica the last dozen years. I think it's high time I paid back a little for all the help I've received during that time. Here's a simple tool I use regularly to assist with some of the most common errors I fell prey to in my first decade of writing. Using it's for its, you're for your, misusing homonyms, which I did far too often. I notice it's a common problem, and hope someone else finds it useful.

It's well short of the 750 word minimum, and I'd hate to clutter something so simple with an extra 200 words of fluff.

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The following Word macro, when run, will highlight in RED all the common homonym's that are listed. If you, like me, occasionally type the wrong one, it'll allow you to go back and identify each potentially incorrect word, so you can determine if you got it right or not.

It's a very basic macro, and doesn't deal with footnotes or headers or anything of that type. Simple body text is all it covers. The original was written by a friend of mine, and I've modified it for my own needs. Of course, you're encouraged to do the same.

To use the Macros, simply go to Macros -> View Macros and press create. You'll have to enter the name of the macro (hilite_HOMONYMS). Copy the macros below into the open file and save. When you View Macros again, you'll have two new ones. The first, hilite_HOMONYMS will highlight all the problem words in red. The second one, unhilite_ALL, will clear all highlighting.

Once you've save this to your normal.dot, these macros should be available each time you open word.

--- Macro starts below here ---

Sub hilite_HOMONYMS()
'
' hilite_HOMONYMS Macro
' Macro created 5/27/2013 by Tx Tall Tales
'

Dim varWordList(45) As String

varWordList(0) = "accept"
varWordList(1) = "except"
varWordList(2) = "already"
varWordList(3) = "all ready"
varWordList(4) = "all together"
varWordList(5) = "altogether"
varWordList(6) = "altar"
varWordList(7) = "alter"
varWordList(8) = "ascent"
varWordList(9) = "assent"

varWordList(10) = "bare"
varWordList(11) = "bear"
varWordList(12) = "brake"
varWordList(13) = "break"
varWordList(14) = "capital"
varWordList(15) = "capitol"
varWordList(16) = "conscience"
varWordList(17) = "concious"
varWordList(18) = "desert"
varWordList(19) = "dessert"

varWordList(20) = "emigrate"
varWordList(21) = "immigrate"
varWordList(22) = "its"
varwordList(23) = "it's"
varWordList(24) = "lead"
varWordList(25) = "led"
varWordList(26) = "loose"
varWordList(27) = "lose"
varWordList(28) = "passed"
varWordList(29) = "past"

varWordList(30) = "principal"
varWordList(31) = "principle"
varWordList(32) = "their"
varWordList(33) = "there"
varWordList(34) = "they're"
varWordList(35) = "to"
varWordList(36) = "too"
varWordList(37) = "two"
varWordList(38) = "weather"
varWordList(39) = "whether"

varWordList(40) = "your"
varWordList(41) = "you're"
varWordList(43) = "end"
varWordList(44) = "end"
varWordList(45) = "end"

counter = 0

Do

With ActiveDocument.Content.Find
.ClearFormatting
.Replacement.ClearFormatting
.Replacement.Font.Color = wdColorRed
.MatchWholeWord = True
.MatchCase = False
' .MatchWildcards = False
' .MatchSoundsLike = False
' .MatchAllWordForms = False
.Execute FindText:=varWordList(counter), _
ReplaceWith:=varWordList(counter), Replace:=wdReplaceAll
End With

counter = counter + 1

Loop Until "end" = varWordList(counter)

End Sub

Sub unhilite()
'
' unhilite Macro
' Macro created 5/27/2013 by Tx Tall Tales
'

With ActiveDocument.Content.Find
.ClearFormatting
.Font.Color = wdColorRed
With .Replacement
.ClearFormatting
.Font.Color = wdColorBlack
End With
.Execute FindText:="", ReplaceWith:="", _
Format:=True, Replace:=wdReplaceAll
End With

End Sub

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AnonymousAnonymous3 months ago

Where did people go to school? I learned all your word list before I was in the 7th grade, and the meanings and the spellings. Of course, I am 91 years old and my aunt was also a teacher.

doodlesdaddoodlesdad6 months ago

Santa Clause the movie, Santa Claus the jolly old elf.

AnonymousAnonymous11 months ago

In your summary line, you contrast "It's/its, your's/yours, to/too/two, etc." Is "your's" even a word? I'm scratching my head over this one, I just can't see where it might be used.

clive_iluvnycclive_iluvnycover 1 year ago

Thanks for passing this on to us. I am not an author, but I collect many stories from this site and find many have specific grammar problems that I like to correct with macros.

UncertainTUncertainTover 2 years ago

It's lovely to see people who love stories discuss punctuation, grammar and spelling. It makes the world of difference for me; bad punctuation, grammar or spelling halts my reading and stops cold my suspension of belief.

I am open to take on some copy reading / editing if anyone is interested? It will be english English.

NonSequitourNonSequitourover 2 years ago

When one puts forth a subject for discussion or a boat goes aground beam on to the shore the correct word is BROACH. Some author last week had a woman wearing one. have noticed confusion between something smooth to the touch and removing wool from sheep. I have YET to read a LitRot author use the correct past tense of grind: GROUND.

traddisagaintraddisagainalmost 3 years ago

shook head =no, nod head =yes. Many American writers use shake or shook when they actually mean nod

etchiboyetchiboyalmost 3 years ago
The correct past tense of DRAG is DRAGGED, not DRUG...

... as far as I know. Though, I believe, it is used dialectically in portions of the South U.S.

A couple of my favorite of the most prolific writers on Literotica do this. They must be from the South?

Hee-hee, I almost used “passed tense” vs “past tense”.

IJS0904IJS0904over 3 years ago

It only took moments to create the macros. Thank you very much for the information.

AnonymousAnonymousover 3 years ago

And one that frequently messes *you* up, it seems: pique vs peak vs peek. A quick peek at the naked sunbather near Mt. Monadnock’s peak would certainly pique my interest!

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