tabs
An area at the top of an office program window that contains commands for working with the open file; the commands are organized under tabs
Yes. The Office program is separate to Windows 7
No, Microsoft Office is a program sold separately.
It is not part of any program. It is a set of applications. It is not part of Windows, which you may be thinking. It runs on Windows, but it is not part of Windows. There are versions that run on Macintosh, but they are not part of the Mac operating systems.
Microsoft office
ribbon
There are many programs that run on Windows. Within Microsoft Office, where you find Excel and Powerpoint, you also have programs like Word, Access and Outlook.
The ribbon is the bar at the top of the program window for all Microsoft Office programs that stores the functions and commands (like File, Insert, etc).
Alt+Tab is a hotkey for switching between windows such as Internet Explorer to another program such as Microsoft Office Word.
In Windows, the location isc:\Program Files\Microsoft Office\OFFICE{X}\winword.exewhere {X} represents a version number for Microsoft Office. Office 2007 is 12, Office 2003 is 11.
The answer is, you don't. Word is not a free program. It is part of the software package known as Microsoft Office and can be found as a standalone package occasionally as well. However, whether by itself or with the rest of the Office suite, it is a commercial program that must be purchased. Only Wordpad is free and comes with every version of WIndows. That is found in the Accessories program group.
No reason why not - providing the document was saved in a format OpenOffice can read. Windows 7 is the operating system - OpenOffice is a program.