Your question is worded in a confusing way, so let me help you sort this out.
When you highlight-copy text in MS Word, it appears in the Office Clipboard. On your PC, the text is being held in Random Access Memory (RAM) -- and remains there until your next copied text.
After copying the text, then position your cursor at the insertion point, and paste. The insertion point is wherever you place your cursor.
Copy-paste leaves the text where it was, and puts it at the insertion point.
Using the move command removes the text from where it was and puts it on hold on the Clipboard and in RAM until you place your cursor and paste the text.
office clipboard
Cut or copied text is moved to the clipboard (or Office clipboard), then pasted wherever you move the cursor and click to indicate an insertion point.
yes
The range of selected and copied cells will paste into the sheet with the range's top left cell at the selected insertion point. For Excel set up for right-to-left languages e.g., Hebrew and Arabic, the range will paste into the sheet with the range's top right cell at the insertion point.
Microsoft Office programs are fully copy-and-paste compatible. Locate the picture, copy it, place the insertion point where you want the picture, and select Paste from the Edit menu.
To copy you press CTRL Key and C with it to paste you do CTRL Key with V Key instead
In most Command-line_interfaceor Text_editor, the cursor is an Underscore, a solid rectangle, or a vertical line, which may be flashing or steady, indicating where text will be placed when entered (the insertion point).
It is where something will appear when you start typing or if you paste something. It is in effect the place where something will be inserted.
A point of insertion is also called the insertion point. The point of insertion is the place, or point, in a graphics program where the next character that you type will show on the screen. The point is typically shown with a vertical line that is blinking.
Your insertion point can be moved by clicking with your mouse at the desired location in a text document or by using the arrow keys on your keyboard to navigate through the text. Additionally, you can use keyboard shortcuts, such as Ctrl + arrow keys, to jump between words or Shift + arrow keys to select text while moving the insertion point. In many applications, you can also use the Home and End keys to move to the beginning or end of a line.
What is the deference between Insertion Point and Pointers?
Use the arrow keys