![]() Then on the window that opens, look at the top of the left list, click open the top box and choose ‘Commands not in the Ribbon’ from the list, then scroll down the list below to find ‘Horizontal Line’ and click on it to select it. Right-click anywhere on the ribbon bar to bring up a menu, then left-click on ‘Customize the Ribbon’.To put that horizontal line button on your ribbon toolbar in Microsoft Word, here’s what you do: ![]() I have no idea why Microsoft didn’t include this command in the standard ribbon toolbar, but it’s easy to add. But instead of quick’n’dirty, you might want to add that menu item to Word’s ribbon bar so you can use it anytime you want – much faster. Then go to your Microsoft Word document, place your cursor where on the page (vertically) you want that line and paste (Edit > Paste or Ctrl & V). Hit your menu’s Edit > Copy (or keyboard’s Ctrl & C) to copy the line to your clipboard. ![]() In Outlook, compose a new message, insert the horizontal line in the body and then click on it (to select it). ![]() Since you already use Outlook and that horizontal line button is in the ribbon bar, you can quickly copy a horizontal line from a draft email and then paste it into a Word document. I’ve been using tables with the bottom border, but that’s kind of klugy to me. I don’t see that command in my ribbon bar (it’s in the one in Outlook though). Hi Coach, I use Microsoft Word 2010, and want to have a horizontal line to separate text in a manuscript I’m working on.
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