ID: Q105915
The information in this article applies to:
In Microsoft Excel, if you copy cells that are formatted for center or bottom vertical alignment, and you paste the cells into a Word document, the height of the cell remains the same, but Word places the text at the top of the cell. In other words, the vertical alignment formatting is lost.
The versions of Word for Windows listed above do not support vertical alignment for table cells.
To simulate bottom vertical alignment in a Word table, use the following steps:
1. Select the cell that contains the text you want to align vertically at
the bottom of the cell.
2. On the Format menu, click Font.
3. Select the Character Spacing tab.
4. In the Position list, select Lowered.
5. In the Position By box, type a value that is slightly less than the
height of the table cell.
For example, to bottom-align a single line of text in a 2-inch-high
cell, type "1.8 in" or "1.9 in" (without the quotation marks). You may
need to adjust this number to achieve the desired alignment.
NOTE: Word converts all units in the By box to points. For example, if
you type "2 in" in the By box, Word converts the value to 144 points.
The disadvantage of this workaround is that the text does not remain bottom-
aligned if you edit the table row so the cell height changes. This
workaround is best suited to fixed-height cells.
"Microsoft Word User's Guide," version 6.0, pages 108-112.
Keywords : word8 winword kbtable word6 winword2 word7 word95 kbformat
Version : 1.x 2.x 6.x 7.0 7.0a
Platform : WINDOWS
Issue type : kbprb
Last Reviewed: December 23, 1998