
You have three options: you can accept one of the corrections, you can ignore the word and leave it as is, or you can add it to your personal dictionary so it won’t bother you when you type it again.

For example, if you type in “lifehacker” and your keyboard has never seen you use it before, it will offer to correct it to another phrase that it thinks is more likely (no, I don’t mean “lifejacket”). It then “scores” those words by the probability you’ll use or need it again.

In its most basic form, keyboard prediction uses text that you enter over time to build a custom, local “dictionary” of words and phrases that you’ve typed repeatedly.
