When you look at the end of the page top right next to align left, centre and right alignment there is a small thing onthe side click on it and it will shows things you can use.
The default alignment is Left.
Fully-justified alignment.
Left, right, centred and justified.
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.
The alignment of the text in the document can be adjusted to be either left, right, center, or justified.
In Microsoft Word, the four horizontal alignments you can use are left alignment, center alignment, right alignment, and justified alignment. Left alignment aligns text to the left margin, center alignment centers the text within the page, right alignment aligns text to the right margin, and justified alignment spreads the text evenly between the left and right margins, creating a clean block of text. These options can be easily accessed from the toolbar or the paragraph settings menu.
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.
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.
The default alignment for text is to have it left aligned.
Left aligned and justified are commonly used, with centre alignment quite common, and right justified being the least used.
text alignment
It is known as alignment. It can generally be left, right, centred or justified.