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You can also use the Translate feature, one word at a time, to get Spanish
equivalents for English words (and vice versa) within Word (without recourse to the Internet). -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "hagen" wrote in message ... Thanks Jay. "Jay Freedman" wrote: hagen wrote: I've read several questions/answers here and they all say that Word does not translate from English to Spanish and vice versa. So what exactly is the "Translation" feature in Word 2003 actually used for? Thanks ~hagen I think it's best used for amusement. :-) When you request a translation, the text is passed to a web service run by WorldLingo. Like all machine translations currently available, its results are... ummm... of variable quality. You might use it to get the sense of a passage that a native speaker of the "other" language wrote, but you wouldn't want it to translate your text for something you're sending out, especially if it's business-related or sensitive. Let's take a simple example. The English sentence "I do not want a fish" is adequately translated by the service to the Spanish sentence "No deseo un pescado." Now take that Spanish sentence and ask to translate it back to English. The result is "Nondesire a fish." The idea is there, but I wouldn't call it a good translation. (By the way, you'll get the same result from http://babelfish.altavista.com.) -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org |