justify
justified text
If both the left and right margins of text fall even with the text, the text is said to be justified.
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.
Left, center, right and fully justified. Fully justified is when both margins are straight, like in a newspaper column.
It is called justified text. You use the Justify option to do it, or you can use the Ctrl - J shortcut key to do it.
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.
It aligns text to both the left and right margins by changing the spaces between words. Creates a clean look along both margins
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.
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...
The paragraph will be equally aligned on both left and right sides .
full justification
full justification
No. Left aligned has a straight leftedge, Right aligned has a straight right edge, Justified has both left and right edges straight.