To create a left-aligned tab stop at the 0.75 inch mark in a word processing program, first, open the document and select the paragraph where you want to set the tab stop. Then, access the ruler at the top of the window, click on the ruler at the 0.75 inch position, or go to the paragraph settings and specify the tab stop location. Finally, ensure the tab alignment is set to "left" in the tab settings, and click "OK" to apply the changes.
Every half inch.
By default, Microsoft Word places a tab stop at every half-inch mark on the ruler. This means that each time you press the Tab key, the cursor moves to the next half-inch position. Users can customize tab stops to fit their formatting needs by adjusting them on the ruler or through the paragraph settings.
No, you do not. A question mark or exclamation point replaces a full stop. ********************************* The answer above is correct. An exclamation or question mark replaces the full stop and signals the end of the sentence! ********************************* I respectfully point out that is does matter...the question mark and the exclamation mark come first, followed by the full stop. For example, the following words with punctuation are presented in this way..."What child is this?". Without the full stop you would be not aware that the sentence was concluded.
No, you only need a question mark.
You ALWAYS use a fullstop, unless you are ending the sentence with another punctuation mark. If the sentence is a question, then you'd end the sentence with a question mark. You would not add a full stop after the question mark. eg. How many minutes are there in an hour? If you use an exclamation mark, then you do not add a full stop. eg. Watch out!
No you should only use a question mark.
The tab stops at half an inch, one inch, one and a half inch, two inches, two and a half inches and the new tab you set will replace the tab at three inches. So from the start of a line, pressing the tab key will go straight to the 3 inch tab mark.
if people take pictiurs Dot say stop stop stop stop stop wilk a way
A colon.
1495
An eight inch thick lead shield.
I think you mean ellipsis, which denotes a pause in speech. It is written as 3 full stop marks. Example: "Well...I guess that would be okay"