Well, you insert them and, and, oh bother! I don't know. I am really very sorry
You can paste them wherever you want to paste them. It will depend on what you are doing. Wherever you do paste them can be referred to as the destination area.
The paste area can be anywhere you want. When pasting, whichever cell you select will be the top left cell of the paste area, which can also be called a destination area.
Select the top left corner of the range.
Upper left cell.
Upper left cell.
Not necessarily. You can just select the cell which will be in the top left hand corner of the area and the rest of the data will go in place. If you select an individual cell as the source area, the destination area can be larger and the source will be pasted into the entire destination area. If you do select a range it will paste in the source into the area, spreading out past it if it is larger, or just using the required area if the destination area.
Not necessarily. You can just select the cell which will be in the top left hand corner of the area and the rest of the data will go in place. If you select an individual cell as the source area, the destination area can be larger and the source will be pasted into the entire destination area. If you do select a range it will paste in the source into the area, spreading out past it if it is larger, or just using the required area if the destination area.
They can be called the destination cells, destination area, paste area, or target.
It is the selected area when a copy is done, and is also referred to as the source area. Whatever is in it is what will be copied and pasted to another area, often called the paste area or destination area.
The destination or the paste area.
column
It is known as the source area or copy area.
true
Destination Area.paste area
Copy the range you would like to use. Move to the new location. Instead of just using paste, select Past Values. This will fill the destonation area with the values of the original cells, without also filling with the origin formats.