Justify Microsoft Word

RELATED: How to Change the Alignment of the Numbers in a Numbered List in Microsoft Word To align text horizontally on a page, highlight the text you want to center. Next, click the “Center Alignment” icon in the “Paragraph” group of the “Home” tab. Alternatively, you can use the Ctrl+E keyboard shortcut. Free Microsoft Word Training The text in your paragraphs is aligned to the left margin by default, but you can easily align it to the right margin, center it between the margins, or justify it to spread evenly between the margins on a page.

by Charles Kyle Kenyon, Esq.

Justify Microsoft Word Meaning

There are no promises that this chapter is of the same quality or depth as the other chapters of this guide. That is because it was written by a single author not working with Microsoft and not subject to peer review. You will not find this chapter on the Microsoft site.

This chapter has a companion Word document that was used for the screen shots. See also this wiki: Justification in Word

Last updated Friday 01 January 2021.

Comments are welcome.

What You Will Learn
After completing this lesson, you will be able to:
Understand and set text justification for Word
Horizontally Align or Justify Text
Align Text to the Left (default)(Ctrl+L)
Align Text to the Center(Ctrl+E)
Align Text to the Right(Ctrl+R)
Fully Justify Text(Ctrl+J)
Distribute text between Indents(Ctrl+Shift+J) - undocumented
Justify Text Left and Right (Flush Right)
Justify Left-to-Right Language Justification buttons available on QAT
Vertically Align or Justify Text
Align Text Top (default)
Align Text Center
Align Text Bottom
Fully Justify Text Vertically (space lines to fill vertical space)
Align or Justify Text in Tables
Align text to margins rather than indents or tabs
Align text in tables - can be controlled by different controls
Other Chapters Related to Topics Covered in this Lesson
Basic Formatting Techniques
Understanding Styles
Automatic Numbering
Template Basics in Microsoft Word
Tables
Additional Written (or Web) Resources
Word for Law Firmsand Lawyers
Word 97 for Law Firms (also at Amazon.com UK)
Word 2000 for Law Firms (also at Amazon.com UK)
Word X (2002) for Law Firms (also at Amazon.com UK)
Word 2003 for Law Firms (also at Amazon.com UK)
Word 2013 for Law Firms by Payne Consulting Group

The Lawyer's Guide to Microsoft Word 2007 by Ben M. Schorr

The Lawyer's Guide to Microsoft Word 2010 by Ben M. Schorr

Microsoft Word 2007 and 2010 for Law Professionals Unveiling the Rules and Secrets of Legal Word Processing by Patricia Gordon and KAS Training

other books about using Word

Introductory Comment:

I'm not sure this topic justifies a separate chapter in the User's Guide but the alternative was to really bloat the basic formatting chapter with information most people don't want or need.

Virtually all horizontal justification in Word is done with respect tab settings or to the left or right indent (not margins). Tab settings and indents are paragraph level formatting best set in Styles.

The screenshots here are from Word 2010, but the icons and keyboard shortcuts shown are identical in versions from Word 97-2013. Note that the screenshots of text include the Ruler to emphasize that the alignment is between paragraph Indents and not page Margins. The margins are shown by the text boundaries and on the Ruler. The Indents are not quite the same distance from the Margins. This is to show that the centering is done to the Indents as well.

The screenshots also have display of non-printing characters turned on. The ones visible are the paragraph marks and the dots for blank spaces.

Horizontal Alignment of Text in Microsoft Word

Unless support for some East-Asian language is installed, you will see four icons for paragraph alignment in Word.

The screen shots below all include a fifth icon for Distributed Text which will show up if you have East-Asian language support installed. The command is available even if the language support is not installed, though.

Left-Alignment (Ragged-Right) (Ctr+L)

This is the default.

Because of the text used above, it looks like fully-justified text, but it is not. The text is not stretched to go all the way to the right Indent.

Center-Alignment (Centered) (Ctr+E)
Right-Alignment (Ragged-Left) (Ctr+R)

Full Justification / Alignment (Ctr+J)

The demonstration screen shot above shows full alignment with both a paragraph mark at the end of a short line and a line break at the end of a short line.

First, permit me a slight rant. Don't use full justification! It makes your text look nice but it is harder to read! Also don't use hyphenation -- for the same reason. Reading is not done letter-by-letter. The brain uses the shape of the word to determine a meaning, and even the shape of a sentence. Both full justification and hyphenation mess with those shapes. (Done with rant; thank you for your tolerance.)

Fully justified text in newspapers and magazines is far more highly massaged than Word will do. This is through the use of kerning and ligatures.

Full justification can be enhanced by using a Word Perfect compatibility option -- the only WP-compatibility option that I know of that is of any use.

Tools => Options => Compatibility (tab)

Check the box for 'Do full justification like Word Perfect 6.x for Windows.' This varies the space between words to a much finer degree than is the default for Word. Thanks to Woody's Office Watch for this tip. It still doesn't make the text as easy to read as left-justification. This option is not available for documents set up for Word 2013 or later.

If you do decide to use full alignment, just be aware that Word is a flawed tool to produce this kind of text.

Note that the WordPerfect option shifts text from line to line. This option is not available AFAIK after Word 2010 except when in compatibility mode.

Distributed Paragraph Alignment (Ctrl+Shift+J) - an undocumented option

Unless you have support for some East-Asian Language installed, you will only see the four icons above with none showing as active. If you do have that language support turned on, you will see five icons in the paragraph alignment area with the fifth one being for Distributed.

This was built into Word as a part of East Asian Language Support and is in all versions of Word since at least Word 2003. Distributed should never be used in English for regular text. Note above that in the last line the parantheses and period are counted as characters and space is used to stretch them as well.

If you have language support turned on for any East Asian Language, the icon will be with your other paragraph formatting alignment options as shown. Otherwise, you can add the command for Distributed Paragraph text to the Quick Action Toolbar or a Ribbon in Word 2007 and later. It is under All Commands as 'Distributed.' When added to a the QAT or Ribbon, it gives the icon although not with the other icons. In Word 2003 you cannot display the icon (AFAIK) without installing support for an East-Asian language. The shortcut Ctrl+Shift+J, though, is available.

If you display the icon, it comes with the 'tooltip' when you hover over it.

Again, I would never use Distributed for anything other than a single line of text for a special purpose. It does not, contrary to the tooltip shown, give a document a clean look!

My thank to Rohn and Stefan Blom for the information about the Distributed option. The keyboard shortcut does show up for the command Distribute Para in printed lists of commands or of keyboard shortcuts generated by Word using the ListCommands command. I call this an undocumented option becausethe Ctrl+Shift+J Shortcut does not show up in the lists of Keyboard Shortcuts on the Microsoft site that I've found. As far as I know, its use is not documented by Microsoft's site, at least not in English.

All of the methods shown so far keep the same text on each line, they simply move the text to different positions on a line. That is not the case with the justification methods for Right-to-Left languages. They can ove words from line to line.

Justification - Right-to-Left Language buttons available on QAT

The above buttons give additional options, even if you are not using a Right-to-Left language. They give three additional degrees of justification.

Justify - High

Justify - Low

As far as I can tell, the Justify-Low setting is the same as the Full Justification setting.

Justify - Medium

Notice that the High and Medium settings move words from line to line. The menu button that gives a drop-down with all of these is only active if you have a Right-to-Left language enabled in you version of Word.

To put these on your QAT:

Justification - Left and Right - Flush Right

There are times when you want one column of text aligned to the left, and a second to the right. (In Word Perfect, this is called Flush-Right.) In Word, this is done by use of Tab settings or Alignment Tabs that ignore those settings.

A common example of this kind of formatting is a Table of Contents. Word will automatically define a Table of Contents in just this way. Here are examples of text with the Ruler, with the non-printing tab characters displayed.

Justify Left In Microsoft Word

Note that the tabs could be set at the paragraph indents; here they are not to make what is happening clearer. If they were set at the indents, the tab for the left-most text would not be used, simply the indent. Note also that a right tab could be set outside the right paragraph indent and/or the right page margin.

The second is Flush Right with an additional Center tab.

The third example uses a Right tab to align text on the left with an even right margin and that on the right with an even left margin. Still with a Center tab.

The fourth example shows use to line up columns to meet in the middle using tab settings.

Other times you will want one column aligned to the left margin, a second column centered and a third column right-aligned with the right margin. In Word Perfect this is done in a left-justified paragraph by typing the text on the left, pressing the Center key, typing the centered text, and then pressing Right-Justify and typing the text for the right margin. A typical place for doing this is in the headers and footers of a page. Both the header and the footer Styles are set up with a center-tab and a right-tab. If you are in either of these places, simply type your left text, press the tab key, type your centered text, press the tab key again, and type your right-aligned text. This is shown in the examples above.

If you need wrapping for these columns of text, whether in the body of your document or in a header or footer, you could use a Table in Word. Remember that each cell in a table can be aligned independently and that you can turn off the borders for the table so that it will not print lines between or around cells.

Otherwise you could set the Right Tab outside of the right Indent or even the Right Margin. The screenshots below show text where this has been done. They have the same margin settings but different indent and tab settings. Both use dot leaders for the Right Tab. Display of non-printing formatting characters is turned on. The first method shown below (tab set outside right indent) works in Word 2013 and later as well as earlier versions. The second method (tab set outside right margin) only works in Word versions 2010 and earlier.

See also Working with Tabs.

Vertical Justification / Alignment of Text in Microsoft Word

Just as text can be aligned to either the left or right indent (not margin) or centered horizontally with Word, it can be aligned to the top or bottom margins of the page or centered on the page using vertical alignment. In Word 97-2003, this is done using the Page Setup dialog found under the File menu. In Ribbon versions of Word it is done using the same dialog launched using the dialog launcher button on the Page Layout Group of the Page Layout tab. These and the dialog are shown below.

The dialog box is virtually identical from Word 97-Word 2019. The controls for vertical alignment are on the Layout tab of the dialog box in the middle. A preview will be displayed as you pick different options. Before you click on OK make sure your change will apply to the part of your document you want.

This setting somehow gets triggered every once in a while by mistake. It may be a rogue mouse click, a bad macro, or an upset employee. At the bottom right is a button that would apply the choice as a default. If that happens it saves the change in the normal template (normal.dot or normal.dotm) and will apply to all new documents! If this has happened, open your normal template and reset the vertical alignment the way you want most documents to be set up. Then save and exit the template.

Again, vertical alignment on the page is a Section formatting property, not a paragraph formatting property like horizontal alignment.

Justification of Text in Tables in Microsoft Word

See Using Tables for Organizing and Formatting in Microsoft Word

Alignment to Page Margins or Left and Right Indents Rather Than Tab Settings Using Alignment Tabs

Virtually all horizontal alignment in Word is done either in relationship to paragraph Indents or using Tabs - both set as a part of the paragraph formatting and often done in a Style. There are times when you want to align according to the left and right margins or corresponding indents and ignore tab settings. This can be done in a limited fashion (Left, Center, and Right) using Alignment Tabs introduced in Word 2007.

Alignment Within Tables is Handled by Additional Controls

To be worked on. See Cell Properties in the meantime.

See this thread for where we are going with this.

How do you right justify numbers in Word?

Word

3:10Suggested clip 119 secondsHow To: Align Numbers in MS Word 2010 – YouTubeYouTubeStart of suggested clipEnd of suggested clip

How do I show margins in Word?

View page marginsClick the Microsoft Office Button. , and then click Word Options.Click Advanced, and then click the Show text boundaries check box under Show document content. The page margins appear in your document as dotted lines.

Why are my margins not showing in Word?

If your document is in Print Layout view and the top and bottom margins appear to be cut off, the option for hiding margins has been switched on. Here’s how to switch it off: Point to the top or bottom of a page until the pointer becomes a double-pointed arrow, and then double-click.

Justify On Microsoft Word

How do I make no margins in Word?

Click the bottom arrow in the “Top” text box in the Margins section. Keep clicking this arrow to decrease the value to “0” and raise the top margin. You can also type “0” in the “Top” text box. The “Preview” box displays this new margin setting.

How do I show top and bottom margins in Word?

How To Justify Microsoft Word

Missing Top and Bottom MarginsDisplay the Word Options dialog box. (In Word 2007 click the Office button and then click Word Options. At the left side of the dialog box, click Display. (See Figure 1.)Set or clear the Show White Space between Pages in Print Layout View checkbox, as desired.Click OK.

What is the normal margin in Microsoft Word?

The default margins for Microsoft Word from version 2007 onward have been 1 inch (25.4 mm) all around; in Word 2003, the default top and bottom margins were 1 inch (25.4 mm), but 1.25 inches (31.7 mm) were given at the left and the right. OpenOffice Writer and LibreOffice Writer have 0.79 inch (20 mm) all around.

What is the top margin in Microsoft Word?

1-inch

How many ways you can save a document?

Justify Text Microsoft Word

Word offers two ways to save a file: Save and Save As. These options work in similar ways, with a few important differences. Save: When you create or edit a document, you’ll use the Save command to save your changes.

How do I save a document as a doc?

Save your document Click FILE > Save, pick or browse to a folder, type a name for your document in the File name box, and click Save. Save your work as you go – hit Ctrl+S often. To print, click the FILE tab, and then click Print.

How do I open and save a Word document?

Save a Word document in OpenDocument Text formatClick the File tab.Click Save As.Click Browse, and then select the location where you want to save your file.In the Save as type list, click OpenDocument Text.Give your file a name, and then save it.

How do I open a file I saved?

If you cannot open your SAVE file correctly, try to right-click or long-press the file. Then click “Open with” and choose an application.

Justify text in microsoft word

How do I open a file on my computer?

There are two main ways to open a file:Find the file on your computer and double-click it. This will open the file in its default application. Open the application, then use the application to open the file. Once the application is open, you can go to the File menu at the top of the window and select Open.

Where are my saved files?

On your phone, you can usually find your files in the Files app . If you can’t find the Files app, your device manufacturer might have a different app. Learn how to get help for your specific device. Important: You’re using an older Android version.

Where did my files go in Windows 10?

Well, Windows 10 has an answer for that.Select the Windows key.Type in the word settings and select the Settings application from the search results.Select Personalization.Select Start from the tabs on the left.Scroll down to the bottom and click on Choose which folders appear on Start.

Justify Microsoft Word Last Line

Where are my saved documents in Windows 10?

Search File Explorer: Open File Explorer from the taskbar or right-click on the Start menu, and choose File Explorer, then select a location from the left pane to search or browse. For example, select This PC to look in all devices and drives on your computer, or select Documents to look only for files stored there.

Justify In Microsoft Word

How do I find downloaded files on my computer?

To find downloads on your PC:Select File Explorer from the taskbar, or press the Windows logo key + E.Under Quick access, select Downloads.