From Microsoft Word 2003 onwards, to view the total number of words you use the Word Count Dialog Box. This box is normally placed on the status bar at the bottom alongside the page number and language.
The box displays the total number of words in the document, or the total number of selected words if a section of text is highlighted. Click the box to open it and further statistics appear, namely:
There is a checkbox at the bottom of this window to Include text within textboxes, footnotes and endnotes in the count if you want to.
If the Word Count Dialog Box is not shown on the status bar you can place it there by right-clicking anywhere on the status bar and clicking on "Word Count" on the pop-up menu that appears.
To get the count of total number of words in the document, you need to follow the steps given below:
- Open the word document.
- Go to the "Review" tab from the top of the available tabs.
- Find the "Word Count" option from the 1st column and click on it.
- You will get the word count of the document.
Hope this will help you.
In Microsoft Word 2007 and past the amount of words that are in the document could be found at the botton of the page.
The statute number is located where the statute is printed. If the statute is referenced in another document, it will be cited with its number. If you are trying to look up a statute by topic, you will find it organized under its number.
look at the bottom coner
It's generally recommended to use no more than 2-3 different fonts in a single document to maintain a clean and cohesive look. Mixing too many fonts can make the document appear cluttered and unprofessional.
It will depend on the company. I would personally use unique views for total market coverage then look at total views for market saturation.
Headings, titles, and sections are the kinds of signposts you might look for when skimming a document.
To find the total number of electrons in an element, first you need to look up the element's atomic number. That number tells you how many protons are in the element. Then, look up the net charge of the element. The number of protons subtracted by the elements net charge will give you the number of its electrons.
It is the view that shows you how the document will look if you print it.
look for the context of the difficult language. figure out what the author means by looking for misspelled words or confusing sentences
It's a formal document usually containing the words "Life Insurance Policy" on the front either at top or bottom.
That is impossible to tell. In which country? At which time? Look at the number of patents in the USA and guess that have the number shows the number of inventors.
a pdf file will look the same on any computer, but a word document's look depends on many factors, such as installed fonts.
look for hidden data