![]() It subtle, but is there and as I said it much more obvious in Times New Roman which is used in novels. Still can't see the difference? Well neither does normal people and apparently Word, but let me type them next to one another: ' ’ The characters in question? The ' which is on a US keyboard directly left of the ENTER key (on the same key as ") and the symbol you get when typing ALT+0146 : ’ ![]() Now to be honest, the reason I need this to work is because in my home language, we all simply use the closest match on the US keyboards but publishers and language purist expect this to be done correctly and use the correct one (which is much more obvious in Times New Roman and not so much in modern fonts). ![]() Then, click the arrow next to the Find button and select Advanced Find. This worked in earlier Word versions I am sure since then it was just a simple find replace operation and we were done but now Word just does nothing to the targets. You can access Find and Replace by opening a Word file and heading to the Home tab on the ribbon. It let's you enter it in the WITH field, however, it doesn't replace the target with the provided symbol, it simply acts as if it did and leave the original symbol. To specify only upper or lowercase in your search, select More > Match. Or, select Find Next until you find the one you want to update, and then choose Replace. Choose Replace All to change all occurrences of the word or phrase. I found a specific symbol that Word doesn't replace. Enter the word or phrase you want to replace in Find what.
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