Either fully-justified or centered.
Left align.
full justification
Justified alignment will subtly space lines of text so that they line up evenly against the left and right margins. This alignment option is often used in long reports to give the page a clean look and even margins of white space on both sides of the document.
Justified alignment will subtly space lines of text so that they line up evenly against the left and right margins. This alignment option is often used in long reports to give the page a clean look and even margins of white space on both sides of the document.
To set the left & right margins... Click Format > Page > Page > type values for your margins in the relevant boxes > OK Alignment is defining where on the page that text will line up. Tex normally aligns to the left margin - however, you can align to the right margin or even centre each line on the page.
The type of alignment that spreads the text out evenly is called "full justification". Magazines and newspapers usually apply full justification to align the text with both the left and right margins.
Justified alignment will result in a ragged left and right margin, as it aligns the text on both sides by adjusting the spacing between words. This can create uneven gaps between words, leading to a jagged appearance at the margins.
If both the left and right margins of text fall even with the text, the text is said to be justified.
LEFT - Align all text even at the left margin, while letting it remain ragged on the right.RIGHT - Align all text even at the right margin, while letting it remain ragged on the left.CENTER - Align all text to center between the left and right margins, while letting it remain ragged on the left and right.JUSTIFIED (FULL) - Align all text at both left and right margins, so each side is aligned straight on both sides. The computer will calculate spacing between words to ensure there are the appropriate number of spaces to reach both margins.
fully justified
This is left alignment.
Text alignment means side to which the text (lines, paragraphs) are aligned to. Usually the title of a paper is in the middle of the line. This is called 'Center Align.' The text on this page is 'Left Aligned.' Sometimes there is a picture on the right side of the page and the text flows around it. The picture might be 'Right Aligned.' Text about the picture might also be 'Right Aligned.' Sometimes formal papers have margins on both right and left that are even, this is called 'Justified.' Since we write from the left to right, we have left text alignment and all lines start in the same place on the left side of the document and end on the right side in different positions. Arabic alphabet writes from right to left so they use right alignment.
False! When choosing the Justify option in Word for a paragraph, both sides (left and right) are aligned to the straight on the sides and spaces are added between to the words in the middle to make everything line up correctly. I hope that helps...