

- #MICROSOFT WORD FOR MAC 2016 PAGE OF LABELS MAKE ONE LINE BOLD AND THE REST REGULAR HOW TO#
- #MICROSOFT WORD FOR MAC 2016 PAGE OF LABELS MAKE ONE LINE BOLD AND THE REST REGULAR SOFTWARE#
- #MICROSOFT WORD FOR MAC 2016 PAGE OF LABELS MAKE ONE LINE BOLD AND THE REST REGULAR WINDOWS#
Earlier versions of Windows (95, 98, SE, ME, NT, 2000) had some support for the tone marks we need, but it was so painfully broken and app-specific that it's not worth using.

Step 1: Choose a Suitable Operating System Microsoft Windows: You must have Windows XP with Service Pack 2, Windows Vista, Windows 7, or later.
#MICROSOFT WORD FOR MAC 2016 PAGE OF LABELS MAKE ONE LINE BOLD AND THE REST REGULAR SOFTWARE#
But it means that your software must be recent and modern enough to have enough of these features. We can take advantage of this support to type and display Thai pronunciation guides too.

Thanks to a painful, slow transition process that has been going on for decades and is not finished yet, computers are slowly getting the features we need to type and display text in other languages like Thai. PCs started out in the 1980s completely English-centric, able to represent only A-Z and a few accent marks needed by Western Europe. In this document, we'll share tips and keyboard maps you can use to overcome these difficulties so you can type pronunciation guides. The IPA system uses even more funny letters and marks that you will not find on any natural language keyboard. The Paiboon and Paiboon+ systems also use a couple of "funny letters" (, , and ) that are not found on any Western keyboard. Various European languages for which you can find keyboards use some subset of the marks, but no language that we are aware of uses all four tone marks at the same time. These tone marks are hard to type because they don't appear on most Western keyboards. Most of the pronunciation guide systems use tone marks to indicate the Thai tone of each syllable (e.g.
#MICROSOFT WORD FOR MAC 2016 PAGE OF LABELS MAKE ONE LINE BOLD AND THE REST REGULAR HOW TO#
How to Type Pronunciation Guides Table of Contents → Thai Language → How to Type Pronunciation Guides
