Brits. Sheesh, don't even know how to spell our shared language! 😉
And we're not even talking Scots, here, the wife's family ... oh ... my ... watching a "football" game from Edinburgh is nearly incomprensible over here across the pond ...
I added English UK to my Win 10 US English install. It shows spellcheck as added. In the transcript, I changed "cheesecake" to "cheesecake," and added "color" and "recognise." I changed the transcript tab 3 dots spell check to English UK.
The incorrect chesecake and color are underlined in red, but reconise is not.
The transcript spellcheck is using the system spellcheck?
I just tested by creating a Word document and typing Recognise, Recognize, Chesecake, and Color.
With my regular US English setting, it flags Recognise and Chesecake as incorrect. When I switch the proofing language to UK English, it flags Color and Chesecake, but neither Recognise - s or z.
The problem is the spell checker allows either spealling for UK English, and the only setting option is to teach it a word it doesn't know. But it knows "recognize," and will not correct it for another word it already knows - "recognise."
The workaround here would be to search for recognize and replace with recognise. Not elegant, and that's only one exception.
@Stan JonesThanks. But recognising ize as correct is still incorrect in British English. Recognise is always with S and never Z. Sadly its not just recognise, but anything that ends in -ise. So the workaround is really just manually checking for things that aren't unerlined as incorrect by reading the entire text. There are no search, find & replace features, so actually the best thing would be to leave adobe, use another program to spell check.
Yes, I think the issue is that they are using the OS spellcheck. They think "ize" is not INcorrect. Which means that this may require a change in the speech to text.
There is a search and replace. In the Transcript tab (source monitor or sequence view), add "ize" in the search box. Then click "Replace" and add "ise". You can "Replace all", or use "Replace" and step through one at a time.
@AnnikaKoenig Shouldn't the transcription for UK English be using "ise" for these?