Windows speech recognition spell mode




















When you speak into the microphone, Windows Speech Recognition converts your spoken words into text that appears on your screen. Say "start listening" or click the Microphone button to start the listening mode. There are several ways to correct mistakes made during dictation. You can say "correct that" to correct the last thing you said. To correct a single word, say "correct" followed by the word that you want to correct.

If the word appears more than once, all instances will be highlighted and you can choose the one that you want to correct. You can also add words that are frequently misheard or not recognized by using the Speech Dictionary. In the Alternates panel dialog box, say the number next to the item you want, and then "OK. Note: To change a selection, in the Alternates panel dialog box, say "spell" followed by the number of the item you want to change, and then "OK.

Select a numbered item 19 OK; 5 OK Double-tap or double-click a numbered item Double-click 19 ; Double-click 5 Press and hold or right-click a numbered item Right-click 19 ; Right-click 5. To do this Say this Show the mousegrid Mousegrid Move the mouse pointer to the center of any mousegrid square Number of the square ; 1, 7, 9 Tap or click any mousegrid square Click number of the square Select an item to drag with the mousegrid Number of the square where the item appears ; 3, 7, 9 followed by mark Select an area in the mousegrid where you want to drag the item Number of the square where you want to drag ; 4, 5, 6 followed by click.

Before you get started, make sure that your microphone is connected to your computer. Click Set up microphone. Follow the steps below to run the speech training tutorial: Open Speech Recognition by clicking the Start button , clicking Control Panel , clicking Ease of Access , and then clicking Speech Recognition. Click Take Speech Tutorial. Follow the instructions in the Speech Recognition tutorial. Click Train your computer to better understand you.

Need more help? Join the discussion. A subscription to help make the most of your time. For up to 6 people. Premium apps. Try 1 month free. Was this information helpful? Yes No. Thank you! Any more feedback? The more you tell us the more we can help. Can you help us improve? Resolved my issue. Clear instructions. Easy to follow. No jargon. Pictures helped. Didn't match my screen.

Incorrect instructions. Too technical. Not enough information. Not enough pictures. Gets the Type of the current instance. Synchronously loads a Grammar object. Creates a shallow copy of the current Object. Performs a synchronous speech recognition operation with a specified initial silence timeout period. Terminates asynchronous recognition without waiting for the current recognition operation to complete. Requests that the recognizer pauses to update its state and provides a user token for the associated event.

Requests that the recognizer pauses to update its state and provides an offset and a user token for the associated event. Configures the SpeechRecognitionEngine object to receive input from an audio stream.

Configures the SpeechRecognitionEngine object to receive input from the default audio device. Configures the SpeechRecognitionEngine object to receive input from a Waveform audio format. Configures the SpeechRecognitionEngine object to receive input from a stream that contains Waveform audio format. Unloads all Grammar objects from the recognizer. Unloads a specified Grammar object from the SpeechRecognitionEngine instance. Updates the specified setting for the SpeechRecognitionEngine with the specified integer value.

Raised when the SpeechRecognitionEngine reports the level of its audio input. Raised when the SpeechRecognitionEngine detects a problem in the audio signal. Raised when the state changes in the audio being received by the SpeechRecognitionEngine.

Raised when the SpeechRecognitionEngine finalizes an asynchronous recognition operation of emulated input. Raised when the SpeechRecognitionEngine finishes the asynchronous loading of a Grammar object. Raised when the SpeechRecognitionEngine finalizes an asynchronous recognition operation.

Raised when a running SpeechRecognitionEngine pauses to accept modifications. Raised when the SpeechRecognitionEngine detects input that it can identify as speech.

Raised when the SpeechRecognitionEngine has recognized a word or words that may be a component of multiple complete phrases in a grammar. Raised when the SpeechRecognitionEngine receives input that does not match any of its loaded and enabled Grammar objects. Raised when the SpeechRecognitionEngine receives input that matches any of its loaded and enabled Grammar objects. Skip to main content. User's post on April 3, This does not help, it must be for an older version of windows.

The question is about windows Click on "Advanced speech options", and uncheck "Run speech recognition at startup". Hi Rakesh, Sorry but I did not find what you told me would work. In reply to PeterStrouhal Jr.

In the control panel select Ease of Access then Speech Recognition. Then on the left select Advanced speech options. Easier still.



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