Christie If the document has been properly formatted with all the specials in MS Word or some other word processor, you can apply the Spanish style under the layout menu the the entire document in Duxbury. When you translate all the specials symbols will be translated properly. An accented o would look like an ing-sign (dots 3,4,6). I'd like to know what is the difference that typing the keystroke slt plus the number 4 key and choosing the Spanish style on the layout menu. Ann Foxworth, Braille Consultant Department of Assistive and Rehabilitative Services, Division for Blind Services Criss Cole Rehabilitation Center 4800 N. Lamar BLVD Austin, TX 78756 PH: (512) 377-0353 E-mail: ann.foxworth@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx -----Original Message----- From: Nordell, Christie [mailto:Christie_Nordell@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Thursday, May 20, 2004 11:29 AM To: duxuser@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [duxuser] Spanish Braille I am creating a Spanish review for one of my students and know how to use F5 to access the codes list but was wondering if there are any shortcut keys to get the inverted question mark, lowercase a with acute accent, lowercase e with acute accent, etc. It's very time consuming to have to scroll through the codes list each time one of these symbols comes up. Thanks for your help. Christie Nordell