- 3.1 Using the Application
- 3.2 Main Operations
- 3.3 Formatting
- 3.4 Objects
- 3.5 Mail Merge
- 3.6 Prepare Outputs
- Short Answers
- Answers and Explanations
Answers and Explanations
Answers A, B, C, and D are all correct. You can launch Word in many ways and all of the responses will do so. Remember, responses are based on Windows XP and Office 2000. You might encounter different results if you're using another version of either software.
Answers A, B, and D are correct. You can use any of these methods to open an existing Word file from inside Word. Answer C is incorrect. Although double-clicking a .doc file in Windows Explorer will open the file, this doesn't match the requirement of opening the file from within Word.
Answers A and C are both correct because both automatically open a new document. Answer B is incorrect because it's incomplete. After choosing New from the File menu, click the General tab and then double-click Blank Document (or select Blank Document, and click OK). Answer D is incorrect because you don't have to close other open documents and it's incomplete, just as Answer B is.
The statement is false. You must name an unsaved file to save itthat much is correct. However, choosing Save or Save As from the File menu or clicking the Save tool on the Standard toolbar will prompt you for a name if the file is unsaved. You can't make a mistake by choosing the wrong Save command when first saving a document.
Answers A, B, C, D, and E are all correct. From inside Word, you have access to all of these possible storage mediums. Any limitations will be imposed by you, not Word. In other words, if you have a Zip drive installed and connected, Word will see it and let you save data to a Zip disk.
The statement is true. Use the Save As command on the File menu to create a new, second file. Use the Rename command after launching the Open dialog box to rename the original file.
Answer B is correct; create a template based on the document. Then, simply apply the template to any existing or new document that has the same formatting requirements. Answer A is incorrect because you can't copy styles from one document to another. Answers C and D are incorrect. You can use either method, but both are inefficient and prone to errors.
Answer C is correct. Because Word is a multitasking application, you can work with several documents open at the same time. Answers A and B are incorrect because they're unnecessary and inefficient. Answer D is incorrect because you don't have to close the original document to open another.
Answers A and B are both correcteither method will lead you to information on inserting a table. Answers C and D are both incorrect. You could do either, but neither shows initiative on your part or takes advantage of existing Word documentation to get the job done the way you want it.
Answers A, B, and C are all correct. Click the file's Close button or choose Close from the File menu to close just the current document. If you attempt to close Word without saving data, Word will prompt you to save open files, but if you answer No, you will lose data. Answer D is incorrect because Exit closes Word and all open documents, not just the current file.
The statement is true. Normal is the mode you'll use most of the time to enter, format, and edit text.
Answer A is 4, Answer B is 1, Answer C is 2, and Answer D is 3.
Answer B is correct. Are you surprised? Answers A, C, and D will all zoom in or out of the documentbut only as a whole document. You can't zoom just a specific area of the document. When you zoom in or out, the entire document is enlarged or reduced, respectively, even though you might not realize it.
Answers A, C, and D are correct. Any of these methods will display the Tables and Borders toolbar. Answer B is incorrect because it's incomplete. You must select Toolbars from the View menu to access a list of built-in toolbars.
Answer B is the most correct answer. Checking Spaces and Paragraph Marks will display those characters as formatting marks in any view. Answer A is incorrect; simply switching to Normal view won't display formatting characters. Answer C is incorrect. It would get the job done, but would display all formatting characters, not just the space and paragraph marks. Answer D is incorrect because there isn't a Special Characters command on the View menu.
Answer D is correct. After changing the default folder, Word will save all of your work to this folder, unless you specify otherwise. Answer A is incorrect because no such option exists. Answer B is incorrect because it doesn't change the default foldersaving that file only sets the default folder for that file. Answer C is incorrect because Favorites displays the Favorites list in your Web browser.
The statement is false. Every document's default mode is Insert mode. You don't have to do a thing to insert data except start typing.
Answer C is correct. You can also enter some symbols and characters using keyboard combinations if you know the appropriate keys. Answer A is incorrect; choose Symbol from the Insert menu. Answer B is incorrect because it isn't true. Answer D is incorrect because pressing Ctrl+F2 toggles the document between Normal view and Print Preview.
Answer A is 3, Answer B is 1, Answer C is 5, Answer D is 4, Answer E is 6, and Answer F is 2.
The statement is true. In Insert mode, Word inserts new text between existing characters. Using Overtype mode, Word replaces existing text.
Answers A and C are both correct. Answer B is incorrect. You could retype the character, as suggested in Answer B, but doing so would be inefficient. Answer D is incorrect because Redo cancels an Undo action.
The statement is false. Duplicating text means you copy the text. The result is that the same text appears in more than one spot in the same document or in other documents. When you move text, you don't reproduce itthe text occurs just once, only in a different spot.
Answers C and D are both correct. You could also choose Cut from the Edit menu. Answers A and B are incorrect because clicking Copy simply copies the text to the Clipboard, it doesn't remove the text from the current document.
The statement is false. Deleted or "cut" text can be recovered by choosing Undo or closing the document without saving changes, as long as you haven't saved the document since you deleted the data. Or, you might be able to recover the text from the Clipboard by pressing Ctrl+V.
Answers A and B are correct. Use the Find dialog box to highlight occurrences of specific text. Answer C is incorrect because there is no Find tool on the Standard toolbar, although a Find tool is availableyou must add it to a toolbar. Answer D is incorrect because there is no Find command on the View menu. The Find command is on the Edit menu.
The statement is false. Using the Replace dialog, you can click Replace to replace the current occurrence or you can click Replace All to replace every occurrence in the document.
Answers C and D are correct because they're both true. Answers A and B are incorrect because changing the font or font size only affects the selected text or subsequent text. You must select text to change its font or font size.
The statement is true. Alternately, you can choose Bold, Italics, or Underline by choosing Font from the Format menu. Like most formats, you must select existing text to apply the format or toggle the format on and off as you're entering new text.
The statement is true. There are three formatting levels: font, paragraph, and document. Superscript and subscript are applied at the font level.
Answer A is 4, Answer B is 2, Answer C is 3, and Answer D is 1.
Answers B, C, and D are correct. Select text and press Shift+F3 to cycle through proper (title), upper-, and lowercase. Answer A is incorrect because there's no mixed case.
Answers A and D are correct, although D is the most efficient. Answers B and C are incorrect because there's no Color option on the Format menu.
The statement is true. Select the text that contains the formatting you want to copy and then click the Format Painter tool on the Standard toolbar. Then, select the text you want to format using the same attributes.
Answers A, B, and C are all correct. Select a style to change the style for subsequent text. Or, select text and choose a style to change the style for the selected text. Answer D is incorrect. Although you can right-click a text selection to quickly change some formats, you can't apply a style this way.
The statement is false. The feature isn't a default setting. You must turn it on by selecting Language from the Tools menu and choosing Hyphenation. Then, check the Automatically Hyphenate Document option.
Answer C is correct; a paragraph mark determines the end of a paragraph. Answer A is incorrect because the paragraph mark isn't automatic. Answer B is incorrect because it isn't a space character. Answer D is incorrect because it describes how you insert a paragraph mark, not what it is.
Answer C is correct. Both force text to the next line, but that's where the similarities stop. Answer A is incorrect; pressing Ctrl+Enter inserts a page break. Answer B is incorrect because you must manually insert a paragraph mark. Answer D is incorrect because only the paragraph mark creates a paragraph break. You might not recognize the difference visually, but Word knows the difference.
Answers A, B, C, and D are all correct. They are all valid differences between the paragraph mark and a soft carriage return.
Answers B and C are correct. Either will align the text to the right margin. Answer A is incorrect because Justify tries to evenly space text between the right and left margins. Answer D is incorrect because it's incompleteturn off the alignment when you finish typing the text that you want to align differently from the surrounding text.
Answer A is correct. This will apply a paragraph-level indent property. Answers B and C are both incorrect because pressing Tab will insert only the first line of text. Answer D is incorrect because decreasing the indent and then increasing it will leave the margin right where it started.
Answer C is correct. You can't double-space a portion of a paragraphyou apply spacing to the entire paragraph. Answer A is incorrect because it would double-space the entire paragraph. Answer B is incorrect because it would double-space the entire document. Answer D is incorrect but would give you the results you want. The reason it's incorrect is because the result isn't really a double-spaced section of text, even though it appears that way. All you've done is insert paragraph marks in a nontraditional manner. Doing so could have unintended consequences.
The statement is false. Leading is a paragraph-level format, so you apply it by choosing Paragraph from the Format menu. In addition, leading is the space above and below a paragraph, not the header and footer.
Answer A is 3, Answer B is 1, Answer C is 4, and Answer D is 2.
The statement is false. You can turn on the bullet or numbered list options before entering text. Just remember to turn them off when you're done entering items. Or, you can enter the text, select it, and then click either the Bullet or Numbered List tool.
Answers A, B, and D are correct. Answer C is incorrect because bullet and numbered list formats are applied to lists, which aren't considered paragraphs.
Answer D is correct. The text has a line at the top and a light gray background. Answers A, B, and C are all incorrect because either the border is in the wrong position or the background color is wrong.
Answers A, B, and D are all correct. Without any more information than supplied, you could be printing invitations, postcards, or even pictures. Answer C is incorrect because business envelopes are the wrong size.
Answer B is correct. All four default margins are 1 inch. Answers A, C, and D are incorrect.
Answers C and D are correct because either will force text to the next page. Answer A is incorrect because that keystroke combination inserts a soft carriage return. Answer B is incorrect because it's unnecessary, inefficient, and can have unintended consequences because there's no way to account for all those hard Enters as you edit (add and delete) text.
The statement is partially false. The definition is fine, but the header and footer sections aren't enabled by default. You must enable them to use them.
Answers A, B, C, D, and E are all correct. All of these options are available using the Insert AutoText control.
Answer B is correct where x represents the current page and y equals the total number of pages. Answers A, C, and D are all incorrect.
Answer B is correct. Answer A is incorrect because it's incomplete. Answer C is incorrect because it's incompletechoose Insert from the Table menu and then select Table. Answer D is incorrect because you left out the Insert command.
Answer D is correct. Press Tab to move from one cell to another in a table. Answer A is incorrect because pressing Enter will add a new line to the cell. Answer B is incorrect because pressing Ctrl+Enter will insert a page break. Answer C is incorrect because Ctrl+Tab will enter a tab in a table cell.
Answers A and D are correct. Using the Select options, you can select the entire table, or the current row, column, or cell. Answers B and C are incorrect because you can't use the Select option to select the column to the right or left or the row above or below the cursor.
Answer B is correct because you're adding a column to the right of 2nd Quarter. Answers A, C, and D are all incorrect.
Answer A is 2, Answer B is 4, Answer C is 1, Answer D is 5, and Answer E is 3.
Answers A, B, and C are correct. You can modify a table's border by changing the border style, width, and color. Answer D is incorrect. You can drop in graphic horizontal lines, but the result isn't part of a table.
The statement is false. You can shade rows, columns, and individual cells.
Answer A is correct. Answer B is incorrect because there's no Graphic command on the Insert menu. Answer C is incorrect because there's no Insert Graphic tool. Answer D is incorrect because the statement is false.
The statement is false. Clicking, or selecting, the image displays selection handles on each corner and in the center of each border.
Answers A and B are correct, but copying the file to the Clipboard and repeatedly pasting the file as needed might be the most efficient solution. Answers C and D are incorrect because the extra document isn't necessary.
Answer C is correct; when you move text or a graphic, you remove it from its original location. Answer A is incorrect. The keystroke combination Ctrl+X cuts the selected text of the graphic from the current document. Answers B and D are incorrect because they're false.
Answers B and C are both correct. Either will maintain the image file's proportional values as you increase or decrease the image. Answer A is incorrect because there's no Stretch command. Answer D is incorrect because it's false.
The statement is true. It really is that easy to delete an image filejust select it and press the Delete key.
Answer D is correct. Use Word's Mail Merge feature to combine address lists and form letters into mass mailings and more. Answers A, B, and C are all incorrect.
Answers A and D are correct. The main document contains the shared text that appears in each finished letter. Answer B is incorrecta database of names and addresses would most likely represent the mailing list (or data source document). Answer C is incorrect. It's not likely you'd use mail merge to create a sales brochure, although you might use a merge to print mailing labels for the brochures.
The statement is true. A mail merge combines a main document (or form letter) with a mailing list or data source to personalize each letter.
Answers A and B are both correct and will initiate a mail merge if both the main document and the mailing list are defined. Answer C is incorrect because there's no Merge command on the resulting context-sensitive menu. Answer D is incorrect because there's no Mail Merge tool.
The statement is false. Never assume accuracyproofread your documents carefully for typographical and grammatical errors.
Answers B and D are correct. Press F7 or choose Spelling and Grammar from the Tools menu to start checking spelling and grammar. Answer A is incorrect because the Spelling and Grammar command isn't on the context-sensitive menu. Answer C is incorrect because there's no Spelling command on the Edit menu.
Answers A, B, C, D, and E are all correct. These options are all available when Word encounters a word that isn't in the dictionary.
Answer C is correct. Simply add any word that Word doesn't recognize but that is spelled correctly to the Office custom dictionary. Answer A is incorrect because it's false. Answers B and D are incorrect because these options don't exist.
Answers B and C are correct. Choose Print Preview from the File menu, or click the Print Preview tool to preview the document as it will appear in printed form. Answer A is incorrect because it isn't true. Answer D is incorrect because Print Preview displays the entire document, not just the selected text.
Answers A, B, C, D, E, and F are all correct. Word offers all of these printing options.
Answer C is correct. Word prints to the default printer when you click the Print tool. Answers A, B, and D are all incorrect because Word doesn't offer any of those options when printing. Use the Print command from the File menu to choose a printer other than the default printer for a specific print job.