Slavery can never be justified.
electronic text is like text board of king middle school
just to make things look spooky and intresting
Read the text once for the main idea, and then look up historical context and new words.
Read the text once for the main idea, and then look up historical context and new words.
It is text that extends fully between the left and right margin; justified both left and right at the same time.
The default alignment for text is to have it left aligned.
It is called justified text. You use the Justify option to do it, or you can use the Ctrl - J shortcut key to do it.
If both the left and right margins of text fall even with the text, the text is said to be justified.
Justified text is text whose left and right edges are aligned so as to fill up the entire visual space available. This text is often used in print, but sees less use on the internet.
In Microsoft Word, ctrl-R causes the text to be right justified. Ctrl-L causes the text to be left justified.
It changes the direction the text is, like from horizontal to vertical.
justify justified text
Click the Justify text button on the home tab. It is in with the align text buttons.
Left alignment is position of text on page, actually text will be justified on left side of page. Where exactly on page? This is determined by Margins, press Page Layout tab to expand and look for Margins, press triangle below and choose from presets.
There are four "main" types of text alignment.Left justified - Probably the most common, all text is aligned to the left side of the page.Right justified - Probably the least common, all text is aligned to the right side of the page.Center justified - The entire line of text is centered on the page."Justified" - Sort of a mix between the other types. Text begins aligned to the left, but lines will "extend" themselves (by increasing the space between words) in order to completely fill the line with text. This type of alignment wants both the left and right sides of text to have straight edges.See the related links section for some examples.
Tags that are styled with CSS defining bold text may look like this. Tags that are styled with CSS defining italicized text may look like this. Tags that are styled with CSS defining text that is strike-through'ed may look like this.