Formatted text can draw the reader's attention to specific parts of a document and emphasize important information. In Word, you have several options for adjusting the font of your text, including size , color , and inserting special symbols . You can also adjust the alignment of the text to change how it is displayed on the page.
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By default, the font of each new document is set to Calibri. However, Word provides many other fonts you can use to customize text and titles.
Selecting text to modify
Changing the font style
The new font style
When creating a professional document or a document that contains multiple paragraphs, you'll want to select a font that's easy to read. Along with Calibri, standard reading fonts include Cambria, Times New Roman, and Arial.
Selecting text to modify
Selecting a font size
Entering a font size in the Font box
The Grow Font and Shrink Font commands
The new font size
Selecting text to modify
Changing the font color
The new font color
Your color choices aren't limited to the drop-down menu that appears. Select More Colors... at the bottom of the menu to access the Colors dialog box. Choose the color you want, then click OK .
The Colors dialog box
Highlighting can be a useful tool for marking important text in your document.
Selecting text to highlight
Choosing a highlight color
The highlighted text
To remove highlighting, select the highlighted text, then click the Text Highlight Color drop-down arrow. Select No Color from the drop-down menu.
Removing highlighting
If you need to highlight several lines of text, changing the mouse into a
highlighter
may be a helpful alternative to selecting and highlighting individual lines. Click the
Text Highlight Color
command, and the cursor changes into a highlighter
. You can then click, hold, and drag the highlighter over the lines you want to highlight.
The Bold, Italic, and Underline commands can be used to help draw attention to important words or phrases.
Selecting text to modify
Making text bold
The bolded text
When you need to quickly change text case, you can use the Change Case command instead of deleting and retyping text.
Selecting text to modify
Changing the text case
The new text case
By default, Word aligns text to the left margin in new documents. However, there may be times when you want to adjust text alignment to the center or right.
Paragraph alignment commands
Click the arrows in the slideshow below to learn more about the four text alignment options.
You can use Word's convenient Set as Default feature to save all of the formatting changes you've made and automatically apply them to new documents. To learn how to do this, read our article on Changing Your Default Settings in Word .
Sometimes you may find that you need to add a symbol to your text, such as the Copyright symbol ©. Word offers a collection of symbols for currency, languages, mathematics, and more.
Symbols collection
Placing the insertion point
Selecting a symbol
The inserted symbol
If you don't see the symbol you're looking for, click More Symbols... to open the Symbol dialog box. Locate and select the desired symbol, then click Insert.
Symbol dialog box