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Alignment determines the appearance and orientation of the edges of the paragraph: left-aligned text, right-aligned text, centered text, or justified text, which is aligned evenly along the left and right margins. For example, in a paragraph that is left-aligned (the most common alignment), the left edge of the paragraph is flush with the left margin. Vertical alignment determines the position of the text within a section of a document relative to the top and bottom margins, and is often used to create a cover page.
When you justify text in Word, you give your text straight edges on both sides of the paragraph. Justifying extends each line of your text to the left and right margins. Justifying text might make the last line of text in a paragraph considerably shorter than the other lines.
Tips:
In Office Word 2007, you can choose from a selection of predesigned cover pages to create a professional-looking document quickly and easily.
See alsoAdjust indents and spacing Need more help?When the left and right edges of the paragraph are flush with the left and right margins the paragraph is?Microsoft Word Illustrated Series Unit C. Which is used to align the paragraph at both right and left indent?The correct answer is Indentation. In word processing, the word indent is used to describe the distance or number of blank spaces used to separate a paragraph from the left or right margins.
What is the alignment of text that is positioned so that both the left and right edges of the paragraph are flush with the left and right margins?justify is to format a paragraph so the text is distributed evenly across the page between the left and right margins, and both the left and right edges of the paragraph are aligned at the margins.
Which alignment align the text from left and right?Align the text left or right
On the Home tab, in the Paragraph group, click Align Left or Align Right .
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