A style combines a number of different formatting settings together. In a more formal or structured document, you may have lots of headings for different sections. You might want certain ones to have the same formatting as each other. You could go through each individual heading and then apply each different piece of formatting, like colour, size, font etc. one by one. That would be a slow process if you have a lot of headings. So what you would do is create a style with the particular formatting settings. Then you can apply the style to the heading, and all of the formatting would be applied at once. This speeds up your work and also ensures consistency. If you were doing all the formatting elements individually, you might forget one element on one heading or pick a different size accidentally on one, so now your heading would not look right. Using styles, you can be sure they will all be the same.
Microsoft Word is itself a Microsoft application, being developed and published by Microsoft.
Microsoft Word would be for creating word processing documents and Microsoft Excel would be used to create spreadsheets.
Do you mean what are the objectives of Microsoft word? Word Processing, Editing, compatibility, ubiquity, Track changes, protecting your document, ease of use, style, printing, and table/graphs/charts.
I would use Microsoft Publisher for that
Microsoft Word is the easiest to use.
Times New Roman 12 is the default style font for Microsoft Word. You can set your own default if you do not like it. But, if you submit to publishers most use that font style. Academics often require that too.Normal Style
Microsoft Word
You would use a word processing program such as Microsoft Word.
You would use Microsoft Word for mail merging.
They would have much more use for Word than they would for Powerpoint, but they could use Powerpoint for some things.
Microsoft Word is a word processing program that you can use to create, edit, format, and save documents
It could be stored in a Memo field, but in reality you would not use Microsoft Access at all to store it. You would store in a Microsoft Word document.