Their, they're, and there are all pronounced in the same way but have different meanings and so are used in different contexts.
Their is a possessive adjective and used to describe a noun belonging to more than one person. e.g. Put their books on the table. You can test this by substituting "their" for "our" to see if the sentence still makes sense. It changes the meaning of the sentence, but as both words are possessive adjectives used for plurals, it should still make sense.
They're is a contraction of the words they are. It can only be used as a subject or a verb. e.g. They're the two best players on the team. A good way to test this is to ask yourself if "they are" can be substituted in its place.
There is a word to describe a specified place, or an unspecified place (the existence of something). e.g. The kids are playing over there. (specified place); There are two apples (the existence of the apples, the place doesn't need to be specified). If you can replace the word "there" with "here" then you have usually used the word correctly in the sentence.
Words that are not found in our dictionary are flagged as spelling mistakes. We automatically generate a set of suggestions for each spelling error based on words that are similar to the word you typed.
If you believe the word is correct, choose 'Add to Dictionary' and it will be added to your own personal dictionary. Words in your dictionary will not be shown as spelling mistakes in the future.
Words that are not found in our dictionary are flagged as spelling mistakes. We automatically generate a set of suggestions for each spelling error based on words that are similar to the word you typed.
If you believe the word is correct, choose 'Add to Dictionary' and it will be added to your own personal dictionary. Words in your dictionary will not be shown as spelling mistakes in the future.
/* changing the font-family to match AW; Was font-family: Overpass Regular, Segoe UI, serif !important */
@import url('https://fonts.googleapis.com/css2?family=Open+Sans&display=swap');
pwa-correction-popup .pwa-popup-body .pwa-body-screen.pwa-body-corrections .pwa-correction{
font-family: 'Open Sans',sans-serif !important;
}
/* changing the font color for the "Disable Rule" and "Ignore" text to the dark body color of AW (#4a4b51) - to pass color contrast accessibility; Was #008585 !important */
pwa-correction-popup .pwa-choice-item{
color: #4a4b51 !important;
font-weight: 700;
}
/* Was #b3dada !important */
pwa-correction-popup .pwa-choice-item:hover{
color: #fff !important;
font-weight: 700;
}
/* taking the green color - #008585 and going for a darker related color - #005252 - there were 20 instances of this color swap in the internal CSS */
pwa-correction-popup .pwa-choice-item .pwa-choice-content:hover{
background-color: #005252 !important;
}
/* styles for the help block */
pwa-correction-popup .pwa-popup-body .pwa-body-screen .pwa-help-block {
font-family: 'Open Sans',sans-serif !important; /* Was font-family: "Roboto Slab", Segoe UI, serif !important */
font-size: 13px !important;
background: #ebf5f5 !important; /* Keeping this light green background for now - background: #ebf5f5 !important; */
color: #4a4b51 !important; /* Was #6f8e8e !important; */
font-weight: 400;
}