Sentences with phrase «catching typos»

Ah, fellow Realtors: You've been getting better at catching those typos and errors, so it's taken me a while to gather enough for another column.
Typos: Reading over your final draft is incredibly important for catching typos.
It's essential for catching typos that your eyes may have become immune to and gathering feedback on the overall resume format, organization, and message.
In any case, the proofreader / copyeditor will make sure your final manuscript is completely error free, catching typos and other mistakes that are not related to style.
Or you can send out your manuscript between drafts to a number of people you connect with as beta readers, who are willing to read your book and offer feedback at whatever level you might find useful — from catching typos, to telling you the character with the Southern accent just ain't cuttin» it.
Your next - door neighbor who's a librarian and good at catching typos is not the same thing as a professional copy editor.
I've also gathered an impressive collection of tips on catching typos, inconsistencies, and inaccuracies from some of the top Christian authors in the business.
It isn't about catching typos, or streamlining — it's about digging that rough diamond out of the ground, shaping it, and polishing it.
Thanks for catching those typos I fixed them above.
Thanks so much for catching the typos.
Although you may still want to have a real person check over an important document, these programs can be useful for catching typos and speeding up the editing process.
I appreciate the kinds words and you catching the typo on the Wellington.
An astute reader caught a typo on a third occurrence of his first name, deep in the text of part -LSB-...]
You can not understand how dumb I feel right now, but glad you caught the typo.
Whoops — thanks for catching that typo!
Thank you so much for catching that typo!
You can then go through the records by hand if you like to catch typos.
You've guessed right and thank you for catching my typo.
The eye catches typos easier than extraneous words.
But if you want to learn to «do it right» - or you need to troubleshoot your ebook file (for example, you caught a typo you need to fix) Sigil is your best bet.
Reading your work out loud has long been touted as a way to catch typos, missing or extra words, or simply notice the passages that may drag on a bit too long.
Once you are pleased with the complete manuscript, I can go through it a final time to catch any typos, inconsistencies, or errors in punctuation, usage, grammar, and spelling that may have slipped in during the editing process, prior to your submission of the manuscript for publication.
You do big - picture editing and revision first, followed by line editing or copyediting, and then end with a final proofread to catch typos and obvious errors.
I advise on hiring a copyeditor to tighten things up on a broader level, and a proofreader to catch typos and punctuation that may have slipped through the cracks.
Many writers will think they just need a quick proofread to catch any typos when the reality is that most would benefit from a development edit and a copy - edit first.
A copy editor's job is to go through your manuscript line by line and catch typos, punctuation errors, capitalization errors, spelling errors, grammar errors, and sentence structure errors (parallel structure and misplaced or dangling modifiers), and unclear pronouns.
There are editors for your story and editors to catch your typos.
I can't take credit for the last bit, as my book goes through 7 - 10 betas (fans who do it for free) who catch typos before publication, but the editing is all me.
A proofreader will catch typos, punctuation errors, and occasional grammar issues.
But just do the best you can and get a few friends to read it over (or put out a call for beta - readers, you just need a few volunteers, they'll give you feedback and catch typos).
Update — thanks to Eddy Elfenbein for catching a typo / thoughtless mistake in paragraph 4.
And if it lets you catch a typo or inconsistency on your resume that you might have otherwise missed, waiting probably helps your chances.
It's helpful to carefully proofread your resume or have a friend proofread it for you before you send it off to help you catch any typos, and make sure that the layout looks good.
Use spellcheck to correct obvious mistakes, and read your resume out loud to catch any typos.
This requires more focus which increases the likelihood that you'll catch a typo in its tracks.
Often, it's easier to catch typos and grammatical errors on a hard copy than while reviewing on a screen.
A regular spell - check in a program like Word won't catch every typo.
Before you submit your document, make sure to proofread it several times to catch any typos, misused words, and grammatical mistakes.
Proofread your cover letter before sending to catch typos and grammatical errors.

Not exact matches

I do wish the publisher would invest in a round of proofing to catch errors made in scanning earlier editions; the typos are sometimes quite intrusive.
Also, I think there's a few words missing from the first step in your instructions («Place the sheet [in the freezer]...») Lord knows I make typos all the time but I love it when people help me catch them so I hope you don't find this obnoxious!
Thank you for catching my major typo — an apple recipe that doesn't have apples in the recipe!
(laughing) You caught me in a typo.
Trump punted his first two attempts at a tweet Saturday, trying to address protests and counter-protests across the country and getting caught up on a typo — twice — writing «heel» instead of «heal.»
Thanks for catching that mistake / typo.
What caught my eyes was the 0 - 100 km time... 1.7 seconds?!?!? Was it a typo?
Most people who read can catch it if there are too many typos / grammatical errors, and most readers have enough taste to know if a book truly empirically sucks or has any redeeming qualities whatsoever.
She always seems to catch more typos, missing words, etc..
If you are not confident in your ability to catch all of your typos and smooth out your grammar, then consider having a pro look at it.
I actually run my books through an editor for structure and sentence by sentence input, the a proofreader to catch nits, missing words, typos, etc..
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