From: http://www.lockergnome.com/windows/2008/09/26/create-a-mirror-image-of-an-object-in-word-2003/
Creating a mirror image of an object on your Word document is not as painful as you may think is to be. Once you create a copy of the object, you can use the Rotate or Flip command to create the mirror image as described below:
James Stearns
A curved mirror can distort your image and make you laugh.
The image of the word PEN in front of a plane mirror will appear as a reversed image of the word PEN. So, if you write PEN in front of a plane mirror, the reflection will show NEP.
Well when a word is shown in front of a mirror the reflection of the word upside down. This is called mirror image.
The image formed by a concave mirror can be real or virtual, depending on the object's position relative to the mirror. A real image is formed in front of the mirror and can be projected onto a screen, while a virtual image is formed behind the mirror and cannot be projected. Conversely, a convex mirror always produces a virtual, upright, smaller image of the object. The image appears closer to the mirror than the actual object and does not form a focused point.
to see our face to make real image to make virtual image
diminished
The kitten was quite surprised when it first saw it's own image reflected in the mirror. The image was obscured.
When a plane mirror is placed in front of a word, the word's image appears reversed from left to right. This is because the mirror flips the word's orientation along its vertical axis.
In a plane mirror, the image of the word 'HOWTWOH' will be 'HOWTWOH' itself, but reversed left to right.
A flat mirror creates a reflected image that is the same size and shape as the object being reflected, but reversed left to right.
The image formed by a plane mirror is virtual image.