A border is a line or image around a section, including page, paragraph, text box, table, etc.
To change the length of a border in Microsoft Word, first select the paragraph or text box you want to modify. Then, go to the "Design" tab (or "Home" tab) and click on "Borders" in the Paragraph group. Choose "Borders and Shading," where you can adjust the border's length by changing the settings for the specific border you want to alter, such as adding space or modifying the paragraph alignment. You can also use the ruler to drag the ends of the border if it's a custom line drawn.
Well, in Microsoft Word what it means is that you can put a border around the whole page... page meaning the whole 8 1/2 by 11 sheet... all your text. A paragraph border will just put a border around the text that you have selected.
paragraph
No. It just puts the border on a paragraph.
The first thing to do in order to add a border to a paragraph is to use CSS to target the paragraph element and apply a border property with the desired styling, such as border width, color, and style. You can do this by specifying the paragraph element in CSS and using the border property to create the border effect.
Northern border is Canada Southern border is Mexico
a solid line at the edge of a paragraph.
The US is bordered by Mexico and Canada. Canada is bordered by the US.
To the south, East Germany bordered Czechoslovakia, and to the east, it bordered Poland.
Kuwait bordered Mesopotamia.
The state of Hawaii is not bordered by any state. It is bordered by the Pacific Ocean.