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Superscript text can be used for many purposes in a document. For instance, it is routinely used for footnote and endnote references. Some people use superscript text for "reference cues." These are not the same as regular footnote or endnote marks. For instance, the document may contain the text "productgreen" where "product" is normal text and "green" is superscript. The spell-check feature sees "productgreen" as one word, and marks it as incorrect. If you use superscript in this manner frequently, this can result in an avalanche of spell-check errors in the document.
The easiest way to get around this problem is to simply search for all the superscript text in your document and turn off proofing for it. Follow these steps:
Word goes through the document and changes the language associated with any superscript text so it is exempt from the spell check or grammar checking features of Word.
For those of you who use styles, the even simpler approach is to set up a style for your reference cues, and then use it to format them. Follow these steps to set up the style:
With you new style defined, you simply need to apply it to any reference cue in your document. The style then takes care of superscripting your cues, as well as turning off proofing for them.
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