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Word Help

Need help finding the spelling of a word? Post it here. If we all put our heads together, we're bound and determined to find it. Right? Riiiight?

Members: 188
Latest Activity: May 20

To keep this a little organized and easy to refer back to, here are some topics that'll stay permanent. If you'd like to see any other general topics on here, let me know.

PLACE YOUR QUESTION OR COMMENT WITHIN A CATEGORY BELOW:

AUTOMOTIVE / CAR
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Discussion Forum

Liting up 8 Replies

Started by Lisa Berryhill. Last reply by Lisa Berryhill Mar 21, 2015.

Medical words 57 Replies

Started by Marla Sharp. Last reply by Lisa Berryhill Nov 17, 2014.

spelling 2 Replies

Started by Lisa Berryhill. Last reply by Freddie Reppond Jan 24, 2014.

HYPHENATING 49 Replies

Started by Marla Sharp. Last reply by Marjorie O'Rourke Jan 14, 2014.

LEGAL TERMINOLOGY 23 Replies

Started by Marla Sharp. Last reply by Angela Oct 25, 2013.

CAPITALIZATION 13 Replies

Started by Marla Sharp. Last reply by Ida Appleby Sep 29, 2013.

water rights 3 Replies

Started by Lisa Berryhill. Last reply by Quyen Mar 24, 2013.

How to punctuate a sentence 5 Replies

Started by Melinda Travis. Last reply by Melinda Travis Mar 4, 2013.

"crocellis" 1 Reply

Started by Dawn Davila. Last reply by Dawn Davila Aug 13, 2012.

Britt and Ohlendorf objection?? 2 Replies

Started by Noga Boothby. Last reply by Noga Boothby Aug 2, 2012.

Comment Wall

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Comment by Janiece Young on January 11, 2012 at 12:20

If you want to post the actual audio clip here is how you can do that.

Here is what the Total Recorder (TR) window looks like.  I like Total Recorder (pro version) because I can do other things with it.  I can take a long audio file and split it up in several short files.  Each audio segment can be programmed to start a couple seconds earlier than where the split is.  This comes in handy when sharing jobs with others. Sometimes it is tedius to send somebody a long 8-hour recording.  You can split it up into segments.

Also, Total Recorder converts .WAV files into .MP3 files.  .WAV files are very huge and take longer to upload when sending.  .MP3 go much faster when uploading.  So this is another cool bonus with TR.  You pay the 35 bucks and have free uploads for life.  I like TR, and it's a tax writeoff, of course.  LOL

Notice the RECORD (red circle) and STOP (square) buttons on the bottom right-hand corner of this window, with the FILE tab located in the upper left-hand corner at the top.

I highly recommend TR over Audacity; however, both can record just fine.

 

Comment by LeAnne Law on January 11, 2012 at 12:19

Or could he be saying something like "known as GSK"?

Comment by Janiece Young on January 11, 2012 at 12:16

Was he saying Novartis???

Comment by Judy on November 27, 2011 at 13:11

Makes total sense.  I too would have gone with Mans.  But it did get me thinking (which is a dangerous thing).  I'm soooo tempted to change it to be the correct way.  It has nothing to do with the lawsuit, just a list of things.  Kind of like changing "a apple" to "an apple" in my book. 

Comment by Judy on November 27, 2011 at 13:03

The name of the restaurant is The Ginger Man.  They're talking about multiple locations.  Technically, what should it be?  The Ginger Mans?  The Ginger Men?  They referred to it both ways in my transcript (blech), so I have to report what they said, but it got me thinking which one is the correct one?

Comment by LeAnne Law on August 2, 2011 at 17:36

I know I've never used "wanna" in a transcript.  Don't think I've ever even heard it.  Quick check with SearchMaster shows I've used "gonna" twice and it was always the witness.

 

Comment by Brenda Rogers on August 2, 2011 at 17:17
Sometimes even the attorneys say it in such a way that "going to" looks artificial.  I do use it when it just screams for it.  Like "gotcha."  "Ah, got you" just doesn't cut it.
Comment by Freddie Reppond on August 2, 2011 at 17:00
I've long resisted using them, but I've slipped in a few "gonna"s recently, but only when I felt that the speaker knowingly used it.  I probably wouldn't have an attorney or a judge saying it in a transcript.
Comment by Brenda Rogers on August 2, 2011 at 15:57
I use gonna -- sparingly (I don't hear it often) -- and wanna never.
Comment by Marla Sharp on August 2, 2011 at 15:37

What's everyone's thoughts on using "gonna" and "wanna" in a transcript instead of "going to" and "want to"?

 

 

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