HIGHLIGHTING TEXT IN MICROSOFT WORD
It's a lot easier to show you what highlighting is, rather than explaining
it. So examine the image below, which is what your letter should look like so
far:
The two lines with the blue background have been highlighted
(the blue highlight will be grey in some versions of Word). When you highlight
some text, you can do things with it. You can change the size of the font,
underline it, make it bold, delete it altogether, and many other things. But
only the text that you have highlighted will change. The rest of your documents
will remain unchanged. So, if we were to change the size of the font in the
document above, only the two lines that have been highlighted will change size.
Highlighting is very important in word processing.
So how do you highlight some text?
There are quite a few different ways to highlight text. We'll go through a few now. Practice them as you go along.
a) How to highlight an entire document
You can highlight your entire document from the Home tab at the top of Word. On the right-hand side, you should see an Editing section:
Click on the Select item to see a menu appear:
Click
Select All from the menu to highlight an entire document. To get rid of
highlighted text, click anywhere in your document with your left mouse button.
An
easier way to highlight all the text in your document is via a keyboard
shortcut. Hold down the CTRL key on your keyboard. Keep it held down and press
the letter A. This will select all text. (This shortcut works in other
software, not just Microsoft Word.)
b)
How to
highlight an entire line
Most of
the time, though, you won't want to highlight the entire document, but just
sections of it. You can highlight an entire line with just one mouse click.
To highlight a single line, move your mouse over to the left margin of your
document. As in the image below:
If you can't see a ruler at the top of the page and the left of the page,
click View in the top ribbon of Microsoft Word as shown below and select Ruler:
When you move your mouse pointer to the margins, it will turn into an
arrow. When it does, click your left hand mouse button once, then let go. A
single line will be highlighted.
You can use the same technique to highlight more than one line at a time.
Instead of letting go of the left mouse button, keep it held down. Then move
your mouse upwards or downwards in a straight line.
Let go
of the mouse button when you are satisfied.
c)
Highlighting
Blocks Of Text
This one
is a little trickier, but not too tricky. To highlight a block of text, do the
following:
- Click
at the start of the block of text you want to highlight. (For practice
purposes, click just before the letter "I" of "It has come
…" on the first line.)
- Hold
down the Shift key on your keyboard (The Shift keys are the ones with the block
arrows on them, pointing upwards. You hold down a shift key if you want a
capital letter.)
- With
the Shift key held down, click your left mouse button at the end of the block
of text you want to highlight. (Click after the question mark of " …
premature?")
- A
block of text will be highlighted.
d)
Highlight
by dragging.
This is another tricky one, when you're starting out. A bit of practice,
though, and you'll soon master it. To highlight some text by dragging, do the
following:
- Click
with your left mouse button at the start of the text you want to highlight.
- Keep
your left mouse button held down.
- Drag
your mouse pointer across the screen (Your mouse pointer will change shape. It
will be the shape of a capital letter I.)
- You
can drag in any direction you like.
- When
you've reached the end of the text you want to highlight, let go of the mouse
button.
- Your
text is highlighted.
e)
Highlighting
a single word
Highlighting
a single word is easy. All you must do is to double click on the word with your
left mouse button. That's it!
f)
Highlighting
with the keyboard (no mouse needed)
For more precise highlighting, nothing beats the keyboard.
g)
Line
Highlighting
To
highlight a single line, move your cursor to the start of the line you want to
highlight. (You can move the cursor about with the arrow keys on your keyboard.
Play about with them and see what happens.)
- Hold
down a Shift key on your keyboard.
- With
the Shift key held down, press the End key on your keyboard.
- A
single line is highlighted.
- To
go the other way, from the end of a line to the beginning, move your cursor to
the end of the line (or somewhere in the middle will do for. It works just as
well.)
- Hold
down a Shift key on your keyboard.
- With
the Shift key held down, press the Home key on your keyboard.
- Your
text is highlighted.
h) Paragraph Highlighting
To highlight a paragraph with the keyboard
alone, do the following.
- Move
your cursor to the start or end of the paragraph you want to highlight.
- Hold
down a Shift key AND a Ctrl key (bottom left of your keyboard)
- With
the Shift key AND a Ctrl key held down, press the Up or DOWN arrows.
A
paragraph will be highlighted.
i)
Highlighting
one word at a time
- For
practice purposes, move your cursor to the middle of a line of text.
- Hold
down a Shift key AND a Ctrl key.
- With
the Shift key AND a Ctrl key held down, press the Left arrow or the Right arrow
key on your keyboard.
j)
Highlighting one letter at a time
- For practice purposes, move
your cursor to the middle of a line of text.
- Hold down a Shift key.
- With the Shift key, press the
Left arrow or the Right arrow on your keyboard.
- A single letter is
highlighted for every tap of an arrow key.
And that ends the highlighting section.
Practice the techniques outlined above using your library letter. It takes
quite a while to master them all, so just pick a couple of highlighting
techniques. The ones you find the easiest to do.
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