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yes.
Press the Tab Button on your Keyboard.
There are a few ways. You can drag across the paragraph. You can use the Shift and cursor keys to select it. You can repeatedly click the paragraph (in the middle) until it highlights all of it. It will take a triple click.You can also put the cursor in the margin area until the pointer changes to an arrow pointing up and right. Then double click. A single click will have selected a line. A third click will select the entire document.
Indentation= selected area Alignment= first line of a paragraph
True, from Outside Borders in Paragraph section on Home tab.
Ctrl + Shift + C (paste in formatting with Ctrl + Shift + V)
Indentation= selected area Alignment= first line of a paragraph
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Well, in Microsoft Word what it means is that you can put a border around the whole page... page meaning the whole 8 1/2 by 11 sheet... all your text. A paragraph border will just put a border around the text that you have selected.
The Ctrl-5 shortcut key will do it. It can also be done in the line spacing setting in the paragraph settings.
An organised paragraph contains a main idea which is related to the other major points presented in the text. Concentration on a single topic, is essential if a paragraph is to be effective. The main idea in a paragraph is the topic statement. The topic statement establishes a meaningful pattern for the information within the paragraph.Here is a sample"Any notes made by students in preparation for the interview/conference session were collected. In addition, the session was tape-recorded and selected parts were transcribed. A written summative evaluation of the students' attitudes towards the corrective feedback/concordancer technique and their beliefs about learning outcomes was also collected."
sorry im just 11 years old