On the formatting plate there is a bold button. Under that there are two buttons that say A2 those are SubScript and Superscript. P.S. All the other answers said that you can find it in fonts but you can't.
Select the "Home" tab and go to the "Font" menu. Press the icon for the Dialog Box Launcher in the lower right corner of the "Font" menu.
Click on the "Superscript" check box to turn on superscript. Press "OK."
Type the exponent number.
Press the Dialog Box Launcher icon in the lower right corner of the "Font" menu to uncheck the "Superscript" box and return to regular typing.
Select the text you want to superscript. Press and hold the Ctrl and Shift keys and press the key with the plus and equals sign on it. If you had typed 102 and selected the 2, it will become 10².
You can format a number to be superscripted. You can use Ctrl - D combination to open the formatting dialog box. Superscript is in the Effects section. You can also use the Ctrl-Shift and the + key to turn on superscripting. Repeating the key combination will turn it off again.
Hold down Ctrl, Shift, and the += key and type the exponent in :)
You highlight the power and right click it and go to fonts and click superscript.
On the "Home" tab on Microsoft Word, in the same row as the bold, italic, and underline icons, you will see an icon that looks like x2. This is the icon you use to get exponents.
Ctrl+shift+=+return
The word "exponent" is derived from the Latin verb "exponere", to "put out [more of something]".
There are five operators:add (+)subtract (-)multiply (*)divide (/)exponent (^)
like how do you download it and put it on Microsoft word so you can type with that font???
if your USB is large enough then you could try and install Microsoft word onto it.
Type them
by spelling them
In 10^2 the 2 is an exponent. It is a mathematical term for using the power of. The positioning of the text up hight like that in a word processor like Word is called subscripting. The th in 12th is also subscripted. You can do that in Microsoft Word with the Ctrl-Shift and plus key, and then typing the items that you want.
Alt + 3 but it has to be on num-lock
He became the leading exponent of this genre in England.
As far as I know, there is no no word that describes the exponent 5, besides the phrase "raised to the fifth power".
Microsoft Word is not for creating slide shows. You can copy slides from slide show applications into Word, but they won't work as a slide show then. You can put links in Word to slide show files.
If an exponent is one, it is usually not put where exponents live. The exponent of .351 is 1, because .351^1 = .351.