fully justified
Home tab, Paragraph section, option next to text alignment options( left, center, right, justify alignment) you will see icon with two arrows in opposite sides, pres on it to expand.
The word is JUSTIFY.
Justifying is aligning text so that it has straight sides on both sides of the paragraph, like text in newspaper columns. It is a term associated more with word processing and desktop publishing than spreadsheets. It is an alignment, but Microsoft Excel mainly uses centre, left and right alignment, although the facility to justify text is there.
Centre
Justified alignment will subtly space lines of text so that they line up evenly against the left and right margins. This alignment option is often used in long reports to give the page a clean look and even margins of white space on both sides of the document.
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...
Justified alignment will subtly space lines of text so that they line up evenly against the left and right margins. This alignment option is often used in long reports to give the page a clean look and even margins of white space on both sides of the document.
The alignment used to begin and end all lines at the same position on the left and right margins is called "justified alignment." This alignment adjusts the spacing between words in each line to achieve equal length lines on both sides.
justify
There is no such word as "penigon". A pentagon - the nearest option - has 5 sides.
low tire pressures, mis-alignment of front end
The paragraph will be equally aligned on both left and right sides .