Adjusting the spacing or hyphenation of words and characters to fill a given line of text from end to end See also: alignment; flush right; flush left; ragged right; ragged left; word spacing
Mormon: Unfamiliar term to most Mormons Mormonism describes it as God's strict confirmation of the merits or demerits of man's own actions In other words, LDS justification is God's act of rewarding people on their own actions, rewarding right and punishing wrong Christian: God declares us (believers) not guilty on the basis of Christ's atoning work
The art of using spaces and words to fill a specified length making both the right and left margins even with each other; application programs such as QuarkXPress and InDesign perform this function automatically to top
Justification determines how lines and characters within those lines are printed With full justification, all lines start at the left margin and end at the right margin
Muller something (such as a fact or circumstance) that shows an action to be reasonable or necessary; "he considered misrule a justification for revolution"
A text formatting term: Adjusting the spacing within a line of text such that each line of text begins - "left justified" - or ends - "right justified" - at the same place An exception to justification is the line before a forced break or a blank line such as the last line of a paragraph, which may not contain enough text to allow right justification Paragraph indents are an exception to left justification
A justification for something is an acceptable reason or explanation for it. To me the only justification for a zoo is educational. In Christian theology, the passage of an individual from sin to a state of grace. Some theologians use the term to refer to the act of God in extending grace to the sinner, while others use it to define the change in the condition of a sinner who has received grace. St. Paul used the term to explain how people moved from sin to grace through the death and resurrection of Jesus and not through any human effort. St. Augustine saw it as an act of God that makes sinners righteous, while Martin Luther stressed justification through faith alone
A note, usually at the end of a book or portfolio of prints, giving all or some of the following information: name of work, author, printer, place of printing, date, size of edition Also called Colophon
To format text so that lines are of equal length producing vertical columns of space at the left and right margins Spaces between words are enlarged so that text characters always touch both left and right margins
The act of justifying or the state of being justified; a showing or proving to be just or conformable to law, justice, right, or duty; defense; vindication; support; as, arguments in justification of the prisoner's conduct; his disobedience admits justification
What is offered as grounds for believing an assertion Hence, also, an explanation of the legitimacy of each step in the formal proof of the validity of a deductive argument Recommended Reading: Empirical Knowledge, ed by Paul K Moser (Rowman & Littlefield, 1996) {at Amazon com}; Robert Audi, The Structure of Justification (Cambridge, 1993) {at Amazon com}; Knowledge, Truth, and Duty: Essays on Epistemic Justification, Responsibility, and Virtue, ed by Matthias Steup (Oxford, 2001) {at Amazon com}; and The Justification of Deduction (Oxford, 1974) {at Amazon com} Also seeOCP, IEP, SEP, and noesis
In word processing, the way that text is aligned to the left margin (left justification), the right margin (right justification), or both margins (full justification)
Refers to how print is lined up at a margin Microsoft Word97 uses the terms Align Left, Center, Align Right and Justify Corresponding terms in WordPerfect are Left, Center, Right and Full Justification Justify in Word and Full Justification in WordPerfect mean that both sides of the text are smooth The right side is smoothed by manipulating the size of spaces
A type of alignment that involves the spreading or compressing of printed text to fit into a given line width so that it is flush on both left and right edges of the text area
{i} something which excuses or defends; vindication, support, defense, explanation, reason; adjustment of words and letters to make them exactly fill a line of type
To align text so that all the lines begin and/or end at the same place on a page Justifications can be along the right side of the page, the left side, down the middle (center justification), or set to evenly distribute text across the page (full justification)