Left, right, centred and justified.
Left, right, center and justify.
s different tab or paragraph alignment symbol displays
The word is JUSTIFY.
In Word: Alignment, spacing, indenting
The placement of paragraph text relative to the left and right document margins is called paragraph alignment. The manner in which text displays around an object is text wrapping.
Left, right, center and justify.
The default paragraph alignment in most word processing software, such as Microsoft Word and Google Docs, is typically left-aligned. This means that the text starts at the left margin and continues to the right, creating a straight left edge while the right edge remains uneven. Left alignment is commonly used for readability and is the standard for most documents.
You can change text alignment by using the ruler at the top of your document in word processing software. Click and drag the triangular markers on the ruler to adjust the left, center, or right alignment. Additionally, you can right-click on the selected text, choose the "Paragraph" option from the context menu, and then select your desired alignment from the dialog box that appears.
alignment
Indentation= selected area Alignment= first line of a paragraph
Paragraph alignment refers to the positioning of text within a paragraph relative to the margins of a document. There are four main types of paragraph alignment: left-aligned, right-aligned, centered, and justified. Left-aligned text is aligned along the left margin, right-aligned text is aligned along the right margin, centered text is aligned in the center of the paragraph, and justified text is aligned along both the left and right margins. Each type of alignment serves a specific purpose in formatting and presenting written content.
It is called justified alignment. You can not apply both right align and left align at the same time. The option you want is fully-justified alignment.