Thanks to Dave, Mike and (off-list) Mitch, the problem was solved I the 
simplest way: delete the entry. In case anyone had the same dilemma I had about 
this process, first make sure you're in the right dictionary. In my case, that 
was the default. Once the default dictionary is open, tab over to a list that, 
on my system, begins at the top with "French." Arrow down from here to 
"English," assuming this is the language you were working in, then tab to the 
list of changes you've made. I notice that the most recent changes are near the 
bottom. In my case, that was fortunate because the symbol I'd used wasn't 
verbalized before I created the dictionary entry. Then tab to "delete." When 
you close the dictionary, JAWS will remind you to save any changes.

-----Original Message-----
From: JAWS-Users-List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf 
Of Dave Carlson
Sent: Saturday, July 16, 2016 1:48 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [JAWS-Users] JAWS dictionary annoyance

Adrian,

When I get an annoying or offending dictionary entry, I first locate it in the 
list of words, then I either select change or delete.

Dave Carlson
Oregonian, woodworker, Engineer, Musician, and Pioneer

----- Original Message -----
From: "Adrian Spratt" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Saturday, July 16, 2016 09:07 AM
Subject: [JAWS-Users] JAWS dictionary annoyance


Hi.  The other day, I added a JAWS dictionary item, but the pronunciation 
got assigned to the character preceding the word, not the word itself. The 
result has been annoying. Here's the explanation, and I hope someone has a 
solution.

When invoking the dictionary, focus must have been on the space preceding 
the word I wanted. Carelessly, I just tabbed over to the replace field and 
typed in my preferred pronunciation. As a result, the space character was 
assigned that pronunciation.

This is what makes the problem complex. It wasn't just any space. I'm 
guessing it's what I think is called a hard space (created with 
shift-spacebar) and possibly a space that's automatically coded into 
documents after a period, since the problem often occurs with the space 
following a period.

Now, whenever JAWS is in "say all" mode, it will speak this character as 
"space." I emphasize that it doesn't do so for most space characters; just 
this one that I accidentally adjusted.

Here's what I've tried. I copied the character into the JAWS dictionary and 
pressed spacebar in the replacement field. It made no difference. I 
re-copied the character in the JAWS dictionary and this time tried to save 
the entry without entering anything in the replacement field. But JAWS 
requires that something be entered there.

One more bit of background. I recently endured a hard drive failure. Ever 
since recovering my applications and reinstalling JAWS, this particular 
character showed up as a non-verbalized blank. Before the hard drive crash, 
JAWS simply verbalized "space," but only when I was navigating 
character-by-character. It was not verbalized in "say all." Now that 
character is verbalized as "space" no matter what mode I'm in.

No other possible solution is coming to me. Any ideas?
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