The blue squiggly line means that there is something amiss with the formatting of the marked sentence, such as the font changing in the middle of the sentence. If you right-click on any part of what is so underlined, you will see a context menu that gives you options to fix or ignore the problem.
Other common squiggly line colors are red for potentially-misspelled words and green for stylistic problems (such as too many or too few spaces between words or at the ends of sentences.)
If you have any other questions or need further assistance, feel free to drop me a line. I'm always glad to help.
squiggly red line below the misspelled words
I drew a squiggly line.
You hold alt as you type 165 which gives you Ñ. You hold alt as you type 164 which gives you ñ. Or you can hold CTRL, the key with the squiggly line on it (and if you want the squiggly line on top you have to hold shift), and the n. This also works for the accent.
Go to the insert section. Click on add shapes. Click on the line. It will automatically make it blue.
The word is mispelledA RED squiggly line means the word is misspelled. A GREEN squiggly line means that there is one or more extra space or tab characters that aren't grammatically needed.
Draw a squiggly line under the 0.
A number of computer programs and phone apps have built in spell-checkers. If the word you have used is not one which the computer/phone recognizes, it marks it with a squiggly red line. This does not necessarily mean that you have spelled the word wrong: it could be a proper noun, or a slang word, or a spelling which is not used by the geek who created the program. The squiggly line is only an alert; you must decide if the word actually needs changing.
No. 1.15 is the default line spacing in Microsoft Word.
ewan??
It is a line that twists and turns, not astraight line.
/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\ is the line
Word wrap.