| A | B |
| Alignment | Refers to the position of text between the margins. |
| Bullet | Any small Character that appears before an item. |
| Center | One of the positions you can align your text is to center the text. |
| First-Line indent | When the first line of your paragraph is indented. |
| Hanging indent | The first line of text is not indented, but the following lines are indented. |
| Indent | The space between text and a document's margin. |
| Inside margin | The right margin on a left page and the left margin on the right page-the margins closest to the inside of the page, near the binding. |
| Justify | The text is aligned at both the right and left margins. |
| Leader | Solid, dotted or dashed lines that fill the blank space before a tab setting. |
| Left-align | You can align your text to the left margin. |
| Margin | Blank areas around the top, bottom, and sides of a page. |
| Mirrored margins | Books and magazines are often formated with mirrored margins, where instead of left and right margins, the page has inside and outside margins. |
| Multilevel list | A list with two or more levels of bullets or numbering. |
| Negative indent | You can also create a negative indent, sometimes called and outdent, by dragging the indent markers on the ruler to the left past the left margin. |
| Outline numbered list | A numbered multilevel list |
| Outisde margin | The left margin on the left page and the right margin on the right page. |
| Right-align | You can align your text to the right margin. |
| Tab stop | Marks the place where the insertion point will stop when you press the Tab key. |
| Vertical alignment | Positioning text between the top and bottom margins of a document. |