Yes. Office 2007 does a better job of it, (compared to 2010) especially in Word. That is using the stock windows 7 speech recognition software. Having written many papers for English classes and have had great results using Word with voice. Had to upgrade to Office 2010 for some other classes, and when I went into Word I was disappointed. There was a pop-up window that was the only place to enter text and once inserted I was not able to edit it by simple voice commands. So uninstalled Word 2010 and reinstalled Word 2007 and they work fine side by side (Word 2007 / office 2010 everything else). once again this is my experience while using Windows 7 64bit.
You cab use the Microsoft voice api. This helps to convert voice into text.
A small text phrase.
rgdhshfghfgh
On your computer, use voice recognition.
Ctrl - X.
You need to turn on text animation.
Typing text, formatting text, printing text, formatting paragraphs, inserting pictures, etc.
Office Enterprise is a product by the software company Microsoft. The full name of the software is actually Microsoft Office Enterprise. Microsoft Office is one of the world's most popular text editors for home computers and is also one of the oldest still being developed.
A cell is a rectangle that can hold a number, text, formula etc.
Microsoft Sam is the default text-to-speech male voice in Microsoft Windows 2000 and Windows XP. It is used by Narrator, the screen reader program built into the operating system. ==========
If you're referring to Microsoft Office: Word, the area is called the "Document".
There are a plethora of options that may be configured in Microsoft Word. These include grammar settings, passive voice checker, font size, font color, and more.