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In typesetting justify is used in connection with left, right and force. In a left justified paragraph each line of text is aligned on the left margin. Right justify has text aligned along the right margin. Force justify creates a paragraph aligned on both the left and right margins.
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...
It aligns text to both the left and right margins by changing the spaces between words. Creates a clean look along both margins
justify justified text
The Space Band in a Linotype machine is used to insert spaces between words or characters to create proper spacing in the line of text being produced. It ensures that the text is evenly distributed and formatted correctly for printing.
Click the Justify text button on the home tab. It is in with the align text buttons.
Employees must justify any expenses of company funds. The standard of Western typing is to justify text to the left margin.
It does preformatted text. It displays text in a plain font and it preserves any line breaks, which normally does not happen in html. It also keeps spaces, so the text will look like it is typed in the source code.
A line of text with alliteration would be hard to replicate.
it is a traditional way of writing business letters - the first line of each paragraph is set 5 spaces off the left side of the text. :-)
When left justification is turned on, text aligns to the left-hand margin of the page. (That's your left, not the page's left.) This is the most common justification, and you can see it functioning on all of the paragraphs here on Answers.com.
When text is "justified" it is arranged so that each line begins, or ends, right under the other, creating an even, vertical edge to a block of text. Text is almost always left justified. That means that each line of text begins the same distance in from the left edge. Text can be right justified as well. Then the amount of space between words, and even between letters, is adjusted to ensure that each line of text also ends the same distance in from the right edge.The wordjustify comes from the world of typesetting.In left-to-right-reading languages, the vertical margin on the left gives a reader's eye the clue as to where to begin reading the next line.The right margin can be ragged right or right justified.Ragged right margins are built by the ends of lines terminating with the end of a word or a hyphen, usually within a few characters of the line-ending above it and below it.Right justified margins are 'forced' into alignment, so that the right margin, too, is a vertical margin.Most right-justified margins produced by editors inexperienced in typesetting standards can result in lines of text that are unaesthetically pleasing and are, in fact, hard for the reader's eye to follow. These forced lines of text can contain too few characters or too many characters, because the software apparently makes the decisions about how to honour spaces between words, punctuation and hyphens.Finally, right-justified margins, such as those you can find in published books, are seen when the editor chooses a proportional spacing type font -- the 'm' character takes up more space horizontally than the 'i' character -- and spaces the lines of text far enough apart from each other -- spacing or leading -- so that the reader's eye can 'find' the next line.The word justify on a software program menu represents the programmer's effort to deliver a vertical right margin making a series of logical decisions, when indeed the human editor is better equipped to make those choices. The word is a short form of right justify.