Robert Jacobs 0 Report post Posted September 28, 2012 I unwisely made a global sentence change via the master tag list; now I wish to restore the default sentence which, of course, I cannot precisely remember. I don't see how to do it in the absence of knowing the text. Is there a way, short of begging some kindly person to copy it off for me? It's the sentence for the principal role on the occupation tag. Thanks so much. Robert Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Harry Goegebeur 0 Report post Posted September 28, 2012 I unwisely made a global sentence change via the master tag list; now I wish to restore the default sentence which, of course, I cannot precisely remember. I don't see how to do it in the absence of knowing the text. Is there a way, short of begging some kindly person to copy it off for me? It's the sentence for the principal role on the occupation tag. Thanks so much. Robert The sentence is: [P] <was|and [PO] were> [M] <[D]> <[L]> Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Robert Jacobs 0 Report post Posted September 28, 2012 Dear Harry, Good heavens! I got up to make a cup of coffee and the answer was here before I sat down again. Thanks so much. It does appear that one can't restore the default from TMG's resources. Anyway, I'm up and running again and I very much appreciate your help. All good wishes. Robert Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Michael Hannah 0 Report post Posted September 28, 2012 Robert, You can always discover the default sentences by creating a New project and reviewing the sentences in that project. Hope this gives you ideas, Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Virginia Blakelock 0 Report post Posted September 28, 2012 ......Or by copying the sentence from the Sample project if you have not modified it there. Virginia Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Robert Jacobs 0 Report post Posted September 28, 2012 Dear Michael, Duhh! But even worse: I could have walked upstairs to my bedroom and switched on the Thinkpad, not yet fully synchronized and seen the sentence there. Thanks so much. Given that I have a memory like a sieve and a lot of customized sentences, a clean copy of TMG would seems to be a useful resource. Robert Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Robert Jacobs 0 Report post Posted September 28, 2012 Thanks, Virginia. another good idea. R. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites