Hi,
This issue maybe caused by without installing with the following Microsoft Office programs:
- Microsoft Word
- Microsoft Excel
- Microsoft PowerPoint
Hi,
This issue maybe caused by without installing with the following Microsoft Office programs:
If you do not have one of these programs installed, this feature maybe not available.
- Microsoft Word
- Microsoft Excel
- Microsoft PowerPoint
Spell check is included with Outlook, no need for the other office products. Check before sending should always work; some spell check as you type features require Word.
Diane,
I have the same problem with Outlook 2010. Spellcheck is not working in Outlook and Word 2010
My test sentence is: "the quenn is joung"
Grammar check is coming back with the should have capital T which is ok but otherwise it believes
everything is correct.
As a German person in the US this feature is one of the most important ones I need :-(
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Shared Tools\Proofing Tools\1.0\Override\en-US
Microsoft does not have a fix for this. Thanks for spending $500.00 with me on a faulty program. I have to reread all emails and documents and do it the old school way. That's the Microsoft way.
Correct me if I'm wrong.
No override, no Outlook Shared Features, no fix?
There is nothing like that in my registry. Isn't this sort of a major error for Outlook?
Anything else you can suggest?
Thansk!
There is nothing like that in my registry. Isn't this sort of a major error for Outlook?
You mean this: HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Shared Tools\Proofing Tools\1.0\Override\en-US
<wrong>If it doesn't exist, add it.</wrong>
Oops - that's bad advice as you should be deleting it to fix this problem. <g>
The usual causes of spell check failing is typing in the sig block (right click on the mispelled word - what menu do you see?) or this key is corrupt and it needs to be deleted. (http://www.slipstick.com/emo/2009/up090611.htm#
I'm having the same issue, sometimes it works sometimes it doesn't. Today it won't work at all. I've spent hours trying to figure it out.
Example:
Copy Winword.exe from here C:\Program Files\Microsoft Office\Office12\
to
C:\Program Files\Microsoft Office\Office14
Reason this happens: Outlook is looking for its own editor which is word but since we upgraded only Outlook there is no winword in the directory and it fails. If running office 2003 browse to its folder and if all fails just search for winword.exe and copy.
Example:
Copy Winword.exe from here C:\Program Files\Microsoft Office\Office12\
to
C:\Program Files\Microsoft Office\Office14
Reason this happens: Outlook is looking for its own editor which is word but since we upgraded only Outlook there is no winword in the directory and it fails. If running office 2003 browse to its folder and if all fails just search for winword.exe and copy.
- Proposed as answer by stoffershorty Wednesday, October 09, 2013 8:52 AM
Example:
Copy Winword.exe from here C:\Program Files\Microsoft Office\Office12\
to
C:\Program Files\Microsoft Office\Office14
Reason this happens: Outlook is looking for its own editor which is word but since we upgraded only Outlook there is no winword in the directory and it fails. If running office 2003 browse to its folder and if all fails just search for winword.exe and copy.
- Proposed as answer by stoffershorty Wednesday, October 09, 2013 8:52 AM
if you recently upgraded to Outlook 2010 you will no longer have the auto correct options. To fix this all you have to do is copy winword.exe to the office14 folder.
Note that this hack applies to autocorrect not working, not spell check on send not working or other issues where it sometimes works and sometimes doesn't. Also, if you have any sort of problems with outlook, before asking for help, you need to delete the copy of winword.exe and verify the problem still exists - hacks like this can have unintended consquences (plus it puts outlook into an unsupported mode).
Thank you -- I found this in my registry, deleted it and spell check is now working in Outlook for me.
I agree, adding this toteh registry is bad advice but not completely off-track.
I have two computer which I work with side-by-side. One computer is running Windows XP and the other runs Windows 7. The Windows XP computer was upgraded from Office 2003 Small Business Edition to Office Pro Plus 2010; the Windows 7 computer has a fresh install of Office Pro Plus 2010.
On the Windows XP computer I took the previous advice and removed the contents of the HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Shared Tools\Proofing Tools\1.0\Override key (please note I kept the Override key itself, the key simply has no other settings within it). Once I did this, my auto-correction worked perfectly.
On the Windows 7 machine I experienced the same problem so I went to go do the same thing in the registry there. To my surprise, there was no Override key listed under HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Shared Tools\Proofing Tools\1.0. In a spark of insight, I decided to create the key, a blank key named Override. I then closed the registry and opened Outlook and lo and behold, the auto-correct worked.
Perhaps the absence of the key is what is causing the problem. Perhaps Office looks for the key but doesn't react properly when it discovers that the key is missing. It is also possible that certain settings contained in the key (possibly left from previous versions of the software) confuse the Override settings if they are incompatible or legacy to Office 2010.
I do not understand why this problem has existed for so long and Microsoft has not fixed it. Diane Poremsky [MVP - Outlook], you seem to be a BFD, why hasn't it been fixed? Why should people who should not be fooling in the registry need to deal with this?
Thoughts?
I do not understand why this problem has existed for so long and Microsoft has not fixed it. Diane Poremsky [MVP - Outlook], you seem to be a BFD, why hasn't it been fixed? Why should people who should not be fooling in the registry need to deal with this?
Thoughts?
I haven't checked, but there might be a "Mr Fix it" that removes the override key. It's not something that they will release a hofix for because it doesn't affect many people - and depending on the cause, may not need a hotfix.
Just wanted to say that the registry hack worked for me.
Thanks
Brian, You are a bang on... I have had this highly frustrating issue for months now and after reading your email realise that every email I write is in the signature section. Thank you. A. Ditz
I have noticed that if I use Stationary then autocorection and spell checking does not work.
Any Idea for this?
Is it one of the stationeries shipped with outlook or a custom stationery?
Did you check the styles used in the stationery and see if they are marked to skip spell check?
- Proposed as answer by Henri.Bergmann Sunday, April 22, 2012 2:39 PM
- Proposed as answer by Henri.Bergmann Sunday, April 22, 2012 2:39 PM
This worked for me
Thanks
This worked for me
Thanks
- Proposed as answer by Henri.Bergmann Sunday, April 22, 2012 2:39 PM
- Unproposed as answer by Henri.Bergmann Sunday, April 22, 2012 2:39 PM
This worked for me
Thanks
- Proposed as answer by Henri.Bergmann Sunday, April 22, 2012 2:39 PM
- Unproposed as answer by Henri.Bergmann Sunday, April 22, 2012 2:39 PM
I would like to thank Jinesh for the note on the deleting the registry key. None of the other solutions worked (I tried the suggested solutions before this one and many others).
I would add a note: remeber to close all Office 2010 programs before deleting the key (and don't forget the backup!).
-Regards, Barbara
I would like to thank Jinesh for the note on the deleting the registry key. None of the other solutions worked (I tried the suggested solutions before this one and many others).
I would add a note: remeber to close all Office 2010 programs before deleting the key (and don't forget the backup!).
-Regards, Barbara
- Edited by BarbaraLloyd Thursday, November 29, 2012 1:25 AM
I would like to thank Jinesh for the note on the deleting the registry key. None of the other solutions worked (I tried the suggested solutions before this one and many others).
I would add a note: remeber to close all Office 2010 programs before deleting the key (and don't forget the backup!).
-Regards, Barbara
- Edited by BarbaraLloyd Thursday, November 29, 2012 1:25 AM
I found a work-around for this problem
On outlook Message window Click on Review Tab > Spelling and Grammar >Options>Custom Dictionaries > on Dictionary Language choose >English (U.S) instead of all language.
That's it !!!
Happily ever after!!
I found a work-around for this problem
On outlook Message window Click on Review Tab > Spelling and Grammar >Options>Custom Dictionaries > on Dictionary Language choose >English (U.S) instead of all language.
That's it !!!
Happily ever after!!
- Proposed as answer by Satish Gadekar Friday, July 04, 2014 10:04 AM
Thanks a lot, Diane solution works!
Diane Poremsky [MVP]Thanks a lot, Diane solution works!
Diane Poremsky [MVP]Pretty easy to do:
File > option > Mail > check the box that says "Always check spelling before sending".
Hope this helps.
on Outlook 20102Pretty easy to do:
File > option > Mail > check the box that says "Always check spelling before sending".
Hope this helps.
- Edited by bbuyack Wednesday, November 27, 2013 5:08 PM
- Edited by bbuyack Wednesday, November 27, 2013 5:08 PM
Working from Remy2009 solution I found a work around along similar lines
I'm using Office Home & Business 2010, so both Outlook and Word are running 2010 versions. OS is Windows 7 Pro 64 Bit
Basically it looks like you need English (US) installed as an editing language even if you are not using it. To add go to the File menu in Outlook
File > Options > Language
In the Table labelled "Choose Editing Languages" you should have English (US) showing as installed even if it is not enabled. If it is not installed add it via the pulldown below the table ("Add Additional Editing Languages"). If necessary you can then set the default language as required.
I'm using English (UK) and it now appears to be working fine.
Working from Remy2009 solution I found a work around along similar lines
I'm using Office Home & Business 2010, so both Outlook and Word are running 2010 versions. OS is Windows 7 Pro 64 Bit
Basically it looks like you need English (US) installed as an editing language even if you are not using it. To add go to the File menu in Outlook
File > Options > Language
In the Table labelled "Choose Editing Languages" you should have English (US) showing as installed even if it is not enabled. If it is not installed add it via the pulldown below the table ("Add Additional Editing Languages"). If necessary you can then set the default language as required.
I'm using English (UK) and it now appears to be working fine.