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You can set your defaults to specify either a portrait or landscape orientation for slides in a new presentation.
False. They are in Landscape orientation by default.
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Orientation of a document would refer to how it is printed on the paper. There are two orientations: Portrait and Landscape. On standard 8.5 x 11 paper, Portrait would show the width of the page as 8.5, and the height as 11. Landscape would show the width as 11 inches, etc. You can set the Orientation of a document in the Page Setup dialog box. In Word 2003 and earlier, go to the File menu, pick Page Setup, and use the Margins tab. In Word 2007, go to the Page Layout tag, and use the Orientation button.
False. They are in Landscape orientation by default.
Landscape
Portrait.You can set your print settings in File - Page Settings.
Portrait and Landscape take their names from the way paintings of those two types are. Both are rectangular, but a portrait is usually higher than it is wide and a landscape is wider than it is high. As printing paper is rectangular too, portrait and landscape determine which way on the page spreadsheets, or other types of documents, are printed. Portrait is the standard way, but sometimes you may want to have things printed in landscape mode, so you will want to see how it looks before printing. That is where portrait and landscape views come in.
Landscape orientation is when the long edge of a piece of rectangular paper (A4 for example) is horizontal. This is the same as the display on a computer or TV. Portrait orientation is when the long edge of a piece of rectangular paper is vertical. This is the orientation normally used in printing text.
Depends on which year you have. In the most recent version, (2007) what is called "landscape" format (a document on its side) can be achieved by clicking the "Page layout" tab (two over from the main tab "home") Directly under the "Page Layout" tab should be three buttons. "Margins" (Down to the left) "Orientation" (Directly below) and "Size" (Down and to the left). Click "Page Orientation" and a menu should pop down with the options "Portrait" (Should be highlighted in orange if that is what is currently selected) and "Landscape". Select "Landscape" and the paper will rotate. If it is an older version of Word, the steps will be similar to the ones above.
It is called Landscape. You can set it as follows: Upper toolbar - File - Page setup.
The terms portrait and landscape orientation are largely self explanatory. When you want to photograph a subject and specifically highlight the subject's appearance, portrait orientation is generally best. If you are shooting a scene where there are several points of interest roughly along horizontal dimensions, or where it would seem natural to use a wider lens to capture left and right elements together in the shot, then a landscape orientation is generally best. The photographer begins composition at the moment she/he shoots, and the choice of orientation will be reflected in the photographer's instinctive and almost instantaneous positioning of the camera at the moment of shooting. With standard SLR camera formats, a photographer's hands will hold the camera on the left and right sides when shooting in the landscape orientation, and when the photographer is moved to initially set the shot as a portrait, you will see the photographer hold the camera with one hand above the other.