WordRake 5.0 added new ways for users running WordRake for Word and WordRake for Outlook on Windows to customize their editing suggestions with the Reject for Document and Never Suggest functions. Reject for Document suppresses an edit in the current document for the current editing session; once you close the document, these restrictions are cleared, even if you open the same document later. Never Suggest permanently blocks the selected editing suggestion within the current document and in any other documents you Rake.
If you use one of these features to block an edit, it will remove the selected suggestion and any other instances of it within your document. However, you may still see similar editing suggestions. This is due to how WordRake’s editing algorithms and the process for suppressing them work. Our process for blocking an editing algorithm is designed to be conservative, so that WordRake won’t inadvertently block editing suggestions that you still want to see and consider. Thus, a superficially similar sentence with the same key word but a different sentence construction or verb tense may still have an editing suggestion. If you don’t like that version either, just block that one as well. This is the trade-off between user convenience and WordRake's ability to provide context-specific edits. The more you fine-tune your preferences with the Never Suggest feature, the better WordRake will become at providing the editing suggestions that work for you while avoiding any changes that are unsuitable for your writing style and content.
Remember that some edits may be from Simplicity mode, which may not be appropriate for your audience. Consider turning off Simplicity mode for a given document by unchecking the Simplicity box and/or color-coding your Brevity and Simplicity edits in WordRake's Options to keep track of which edits you actually want WordRake to stop suggesting.