wow, that sure dug up all the nasty words didn't it.  Apparently the f
bomb is only the beginning of the profanity, looks like its time for the
teacher to clean up the dictionary - good luck.

Well I think we have just about gone off topic long enough, the answer
has been obtained, and we have had some heated 'debate'.  What do you
say we get back to work and leave this one behind us.

Robert

>>> "Craig Herman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 11/18/05 11:17 AM >>>
Type "mishandle" and look at the fourth term from the bottom.  It
gives
"f**k up" as a synonym.  That was the real problem that I had.  On the
other
hand, if you type "f**k up" and look up a synonym in the thesaurus, it
gives
good suggestions as alternates.  I guess that makes it sort of even. I
checked MS Word.  If you misspell "f**k", it marks it as incorrect.  If
you
look up "f**k" or "f**k up", it gives no suggestions. What would be
better
is to not give "f**k up" as a synonym, but to give synonyms for "f**k
up" if
asked. After checking further, look up "motherf**ker" and see what you
get.

Craig

-----Original Message-----
From: Robert Volke [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Friday, November 18, 2005 10:15 AM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: RE: [users] Profanity in the dictionary and thesaurus


The only instance I'd see this being an issue for a school would be if
you
typed in botch and you got f*ck up suggested as a synonym.  I checked
and in
fact f*ck up is not suggested at all.  The only instance in which it
comes
up is if the user types it, and in that case it suggests synonyms. 
Why
shouldn't the software offer the kids nice alternatives to otherwise
nasty
words?  Isn't this your original concern anyway?  If the kids already
know
the word enough to spell it correctly, then I think censoring the
dictionary
is going to be fruitless.  That's my two cents.  Good luck with the
distribution, personally I hope more schools begin using OpenOffice as
I
think they can benefit the most from its use.

Robert 

>>> "Craig Herman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 11/18/05 8:04 AM >>>
I'm not necessarily trying to be a censor. What I was really concerned
about
was being forced to remove OpenOffice.org from the computers in my
classroom
because of those words.  I looked them up in a school dictionary and
they
were there also,  so I doubt it will be an issue.  However, I still
think a
user should have the ability to remove or add words and/or phrases from
the
dictionary and thesaurus if they want to.

Craig

-----Original Message-----
From: Wangshanpo [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Friday, November 18, 2005 7:29 AM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [users] Profanity in the dictionary and thesaurus


Martin S wrote:
> 2005/11/18, Craig Herman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>   
>> The word f**k and the expression "f**k up" are in the dictionary
and

>> thesaurus. Is it possible to remove these? I have tried, but I have

>> been unsuccessful. I would like to use these at my school, but with

>> these words in the dictionary, I don't think that will be possible.
>>
>>     
>
> Interesting.
> My sons school has a policy against profanity in school. However, no

> one has ever come up with the idea of censoring the Word
dictionaries. 
> Children pick up these words weather you like or not, so it's fairly

> pointless in trying to censor dictionaries. And if they still use
them 
> in texts, they might as well spell them correctly.
>
> Personally I'd be very reluctant to start practicing censorship -
you

> never know where it ends.
>
> Regards,
>
> Martin S
>
>   
Craig asked a very simple function/operation related question but see 
how it ferreted out those whose moral judgement is evidently better
than 
the rest.
Intriguing!


-- 
OOo 2.0 - Seamonkey 1.5 (nightly build) - Win XP sp2
=================================

http://www.answersingenesis.org/ 


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