![]() ![]() Let's go to the Page Layout tab, and in the Page Setup group click on the dialogue launcher here. What we'll do is select the heading and the first paragraph. Let's insert a page break here, just after the first paragraph by pressing ctrl and Enter on the keyboard. So far we've been looking at aligning text from left to right - horizontally - but we can also align text vertically, from top to bottom too. We'll change the text back to left align now. Justify aligns your text to both left and right margins, and that makes the text look very neat and tidy. And if we do that, we can see that the text is now aligned to the right margin. So you can probably guess, looking at the Align Text Right button, that's how the text is going to look. There is a visual clue, too, on each of the buttons which shows how your selected text will look when you click on that button. ![]() The second option, centre, simply centres the text between the two margins, like so. The first option, which is Align Text Left aligns the text to the left margin, and that's the default option that you can see on this first paragraph now. The best way to explain how they work is to illustrate with an example, so let's select the first paragraph in our sample document and go through each alignment option. These options can be found on the home tab, in the Paragraph group. The alignment options in Microsoft Word 2010 align your text relative to the left and right margins of your document.
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