Marty, that is a fantastic hint! Thank you! This is going right into my toolbox for proofreading. I run into French words a lot in books I'm proofreading and I don't know any French at all. This is a great general technique.
Judy s. From: Martha Rafter <mlhr@xxxxxxx> To: <bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>References: d436115b-ae61-4069-b92e-89186f507d5c@xxxxxxxxxxxx <005101cd70cb$eeb6c5c0$cc245140$@net> <008101cd70d0$7a9cfe70$6fd6fb50$@sbcglobal.net>
In-Reply-To: <008101cd70d0$7a9cfe70$6fd6fb50$@sbcglobal.net> Subject: [bksvol-discuss] Re: religious books Date: Thu, 2 Aug 2012 19:12:44 -0400 Hi Lori and Lisa,I'm also proofreading an excellently scanned book with both Hebrew and Greek words in it. Like you, lori, I spend half my time at google. I put in the word and then write either +hebrew or +greek. That works for me; I'm not really looking for a definition, but just confirmation that the word is really a word. HTH!
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