It should be the same on the Mac version and the Windows version of Microsoft Word. If the ruler is displayed on the top and at the side of the document window, you can use it to change your margins. Hover your mouse over the the separator between the blue area and the grey/white area of the ruler (you may need to move the indent controls out of the way first -- you can move them back later). Click and drag this either direction to change the margin. Also, if you hold down the option key, you can see the lengths between the margins (i.e. the distance from the edge of the document to the margin). If you need to adjust the margins more precisely, you can use the Document formatting dialog. It's under the menu "Format" > "Document..."
The first step in setting margins is to open the document in the word processing software you are using, such as Microsoft Word or Google Docs.
First click on the File tab,then click on Page Setup. Once you have that box open you can alter the margins to whatever you want them to be.
In Microsoft Word 2003, it is under File --> Page Setup, and on the Margins tab you can set the regular margins. On the Layout tab, you can set the header and footer margins. In Microsoft Word 2007, it is on the Page Layout tab. There is a Margins dropdown menu.
Go into the File menu and Page Setup. Margins and other things can be set there.
The Ruler.
to align both the left and right margins by:tarek rami jandali6c
A 1000-word essay is typically about 4 pages if double-spaced and around 2 pages if single-spaced, using a standard font and margins.
She paid a seamstress to alter the waistline of the dress.
If you're on Microsoft Word, go up to the ruler automatically present on your document. If your ruler/slide isn't there, go under "View" and check "Ruler" on. When this is done, you may drag (I suggest a few centimeters at a time rather than inches) your margins in (for making your text longer) or out (for making your text shorter) using the blue arrows at the top of the screen. If you can't figure this out through text alone, you can google screenshots of "ruler margins" on word. It should show you what the ruler is. Hope this helped!
Center between the top and bottom margins of the page, paragraph, table, etc.
Yes: Top, Bottom, Left, & Right --plus the gutter & it's position. Find these under File >Page Setup... 'Margins' tab.
In Microsoft Word page set up is in the page layout menu. This is where you set up your page -- adjust margins, set the page orientation, set up columns, add page breaks.