On 12/06/2005, at 12:01 PM, Susan Hastings wrote:
I can only find American dictionaries in the Dictionary application.
Apologies after re-visiting it is pronunciation, try Omni product
OmniDictionary it is a free download form Omni which utilises the
dict.org server.
On 12/06/2005, at 11:29 AM, Rob Davies wrote:
On 11/06/2005, at 9:59 PM, John Winters wrote:
Hi WAMUGers,
Does anyone know if it is possible to replace the US dictionary
built in to
the system wide Tiger Dictionary application with an Australian
English or
UK English dictionary? I¹m getting sick of colour being
underlined in red!
It is not a SpellChecker, but a Dictionary. System wide is controlled
by System Preferences > International > Languages > Edit List select
or de-select your preferred languages.
I have 3 places my dictionary are controlled from:
1: System wide? This is controlled from International in your
preference folder activate or de-activate relevant language via
edit list button. Then you move them up and down to which one you
would like to be first choice then one would assume it goes down
sliding scale until it discovers the word.
2: The Dictionary application which can be activated by selecting
a word then ctrl+cmd+d. Its preferences are situated in the drop
down list menu of program name once you activate program from your
Applications folder. Select your preferred English version.
3: CocoaAspell, these are set by program controls and language
activation in Spelling > System Preferences.
Finder > Help > Mac Help > Language also gives some other information
<snipd>
Cheers!
Rob Davies
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
"You can always tell if you're working on a Mac or a PC," he said.
"Just take your applications and stick them in and see if they run
(Gates 05)." If it does Welcome to Mac OS X! (RJDarts 05).