Create the three tables leaving a line space between each to keep them separate. Resize them so that they will fit across the width of the page. Select each table and from the Table menu choose Properties. Under the Table tab select 'Around' for 'Text Wrapping'. You will now be able to click and drag each table on to the one line (Click on the selection cross to do this)
2007-01-31 09:42:38
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answer #1
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answered by alpha 7
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1) Create a 3-cell table by using the Table button on the toolbar.
2) Position your mouse in cell #1. Create another table just like you did in Step 1.
3) Repeat step 2 in cells #2 and #3.
You will then have three tables side-by-side.
For the table created in Step 1, you might not want to have grid lines because they would look funny. So, position the cursor in any of the cells of the table created in Step 1. On the Table menu, choose Table Properties. Click the Borders and Shading button. Chose None and click OK.
When printed, you will see only the tables created in Step 2; thus it will appear that you have three tables side-by-side.
2007-01-29 03:34:36
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answer #2
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answered by MinstrelInTheGallery 4
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Both sides have some truth. It is true that there was dispute about which books should be included in the Bible prior to the Reformation, and various manuscript copies of the Bible from the Middle Ages include different books in a different order. All the books known as the 'Old Testament Apocrypha' made their way into the Latin Vulgate at some stage, though not all are the work of St Jerome. The Gutenberg Bible (1455) included most of the books of the Old Testament Apocrypha, although these were not separated out. The Douai-Rheims Version of 1582 also includes all these books. It was Luther who decided finally to omit the Apocrypha in 1534 (he also had grave doubts about the canonicity of several books which remain in the Protestant New Testament, including Revelations), and his lead was followed by the King James Version of 1611. It was the Council of Trent in the mid-16th century that finally issued a decision that these books should be included in the Catholic Bible. So the final form of the Catholic and Protestant Bibles emerged at around the same time, consolidating the form and order of the Biblical books after the relative uncertainty and diverse composition of the Bible in the Middle Ages.
2016-03-29 08:03:03
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Two ways spring to mind, 1] create each table in a separate doc. and then import each table into the final doc. or 2] use the insert (table ) function and resize it, insert the next resize it and then insert the last table.
2007-01-29 03:35:18
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answer #4
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answered by ♣ My Brainhurts ♣ 5
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Try creating columns.
2007-01-29 03:28:05
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answer #5
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answered by doktordbel 5
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