Highlight selected text
-
Select the text that you want to highlight.
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Go to Home and, select the arrow next to Text Highlight Color.
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Select the color that you want.
Note: Use a light highlight color if you plan to print the document by using a monochrome palette or dot-matrix printer.
Highlight multiple parts of a document
This method is best for highlighting multiple parts of a document because the Highlight tool stays on until you decide to turn it off.
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Go to Home and select the arrow next to Text Highlight Color.
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Select the color that you want.
The Text Highlight Color button displays the selected color, and the mouse pointer becomes a when you point to the area of your document that contains text.
Note: Use a light highlight color if you plan to print the document by using a monochrome palette or dot-matrix printer.
-
Select the text or graphic that you want to highlight.
-
To stop highlighting, select the arrow next to Text Highlight Color and select Stop Highlighting, or press Esc.
The mouse pointer becomes a when you point to your document.
Remove highlighting from part or all of a document
-
Select the text that you want to remove highlighting from, or press Ctrl+A to select all of the text.
-
Go to Home and select the arrow next to Text Highlight Color.
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Select No Color.
Quickly find highlighted text
-
If you are using Word 2016 or Word 2013, select Find > Advanced Find.
If you are using Word 2010, select Find.
The Find and Replace box appears.
-
Select Format > Highlight.
If you don’t see the Format button, select More.
-
Select Find Next.
Highlight selected text
-
Select the text that you want to highlight.
-
Go to Home and select the arrow next to Text Highlight Color.
-
Select the color that you want.
Note: Use a light highlight color if you plan to print the document by using a monochrome palette or printer.
Highlight multiple parts of a document
This method is best for highlighting multiple parts of a document because the Highlight tool stays on until you decide to turn it off.
-
Go to Home and select the arrow next to Text Highlight Color.
-
Select the color that you want.
The Text Highlight Color button displays the selected color, and the mouse pointer becomes a when you point to the area of your document that contains text.
Note: Use a light-toned highlight color if you plan to print the document by using a monochrome palette or printer.
-
Select the text or graphic that you want to highlight.
-
To stop highlighting, select the arrow next to Text Highlight Color and select Stop Highlighting, or press Esc.
The mouse pointer becomes a when you point to your document.
Remove highlighting from part or all of a document
-
Select the text that you want to remove highlighting from, or press Ctrl+A to select all of the text in the document.
-
Go to Home and select the arrow next to Text Highlight Color.
-
Select No Color.
Quickly find highlighted text
-
Select Find > Advanced Find.
The Find and Replace box appears.
-
Select Format > Highlight.
If you don’t see the Format button, select More.
-
Select Find Next.
How highlight in Word works
Learn how to highlight in Word, how to remove highlight / unhighlight in Word, find and replace highlight, etc.
In Word, you can highlight text on the screen much like you can highlight text on paper using a highlighter. In this article, you will find general information about how highlight in Word works. The basic information about highlight applies to both the built-in highlight functionality and the functionality of the DocTools HighlightManager add-in.
There is no difference between highlight added using the DocTools HighlightManager add-in and using the built-in highlight functionality in Word. The difference is that DocTools HighlightManager add-in makes the work much faster and more flexible.
15 available highlight colors
Word offers 15 highlight colors. For years, Word users have asked for more colors or the option to customize highlight colors, but so far with no luck.
Figure 1. Word highlight colors and their names.
Many of the 15 highlight colors available are too dark to use in most cases – for example, you can’t read black text on any of the darkest highlight colors.
Personally, I use yellow, bright green, turquoise and, in a few cases, red. The colors are rather glaring but I find they are the only ones that work.
Even if the Gray 25% is light enough to read the text, I don’t use it since it is impossible to distinguish it from selected text and from fields with field shading turned on.
In addition to the 15 highlight colors, there is a No Color which removes highlight.
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How to show or hide highlight on screen and in print
- Highlight is neither font formatting nor paragraph formatting
- Highlight in Word documents is placed in its own layer that you can either show or hide
Even if it may look so, highlight in Word is not applied as font formatting or paragraph formatting like e.g. color shading. If you check the formatting of highlighted text, you will not see the highlight listed anywhere.
The display of highlight is managed via an option in Word:
- To show highlight both on the screen and in print, turn ON File > Options > Display > Show highlighter marks. See Figure 2 below.
- To hide highlight both on the screen and in print, turn OFF File > Options > Display > Show highlighter marks. See Figure 2 below.
Note that the Show highlighter marks setting is a global Word setting. It applies to all documents.
When you turn off Show highlighter marks, any highlight in documents will only be hidden, not removed. As soon as you turn on the setting, the highlight will appear again, if any. The highlight will also be visible if the document is opened on another computer with the setting turned on.
Figure 2. To show highlight on the screen and in print, turn on Show highlighter marks.
When you select a highlight color using the built-in functionality of Word, that color will be set as the default highlight color, i.e. the same color will be applied the next time you click the Text Highlight Color icon in the Home tab of the Ribbon or in the Mini Toolbar.
As opposed to the built-in functionality, the selection of a specific highlight color using the Apply Highlight command in the DocTools HighlightManager add-in will not affect your next highlight operation. The add-in lets you apply any highlight color with a click.
How to print without highlight
As explained above, you can turn highlight on and off, without removing the highlight from the document.
To print without highlight but keep the highlight in the document:
- Turn off display of highlight as explained above (see Figure 2).
- Print.
- Turn highlight on again, if you want.
In the DocTools HighlightManager add-in, you will find a command for quickly turning on and off the display of highlight instead of digging deep into the Word Options dialog box.
Highlight and track changes
Changing highlight in a document is not registered by track changes. Even if track changes is on, Word will not regard a highlight change as a revision.
The difference between highlight color and shading color
You should be aware of the difference between highlight and shading.
As mentioned above, the number of highlight colors is limited. On the other hand, you can apply any color of your choice via the Shading tools in Word. This may make users want to use shading instead of highlight in order to get access to more colors. However, the two types of coloring work in totally different ways.
As explained above, highlight in Word is neither font formatting nor paragraph formatting. The highlight lives in its own layer in Word and can be turned on or off for all content. The same is not possible with shading.
If you apply a shading color to content using a color from one of the Shading tools in Word or via the Borders and Shading dialog box, that color is applied as formatting of text, paragraphs, table cells or entire tables.
This means that the shading is applied as a characteristic or an attribute of the text, paragraph, table cell or table itself.
You can’t turn on and off shading for an entire document as you can with highlight. You can easily select all and set the shading to No Color. However, once you have removed the shading, you can’t easily apply it again if spread across the entire document. This means that it may not necessarily be a good idea to use shading as a substitute for highlight.
Highlight is often used as a temporary marking of content, e.g. during the editing process. Shading may more often be used as permanent formatting that is meant to remain in the finished document.
Figure 3. A color selected from a Shading palette is either font, paragraph, or table formatting.
A shading color you apply via a Shading palette or via the Borders and Shading dialog box is applied as one of the following types of formatting depending on the conditions and what you select:
- Font formatting applied to text
- Paragraph formatting applied to entire paragraph(s)
- Table cell formatting applied to entire table cell(s)
- Table formatting applied to entire table(s)
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How to highlight in Word using the built-in functionality
You can apply highlight in different ways using the built-in functionality in Word. See METHODs 1-4 below. When you apply highlight to selected text in Word using the built-in methods described below, Word doesn’t retain the selection but collapses the selection so the insertion point is placed after the selection afterwards. Since you may often want to apply e.g. formatting to the same selection immediately after applying highlight, this is not always practical.
The DocTools HighlightManager add-in lets you decide whether or not to keep the selection after highlighting text. It can help you save time.
METHOD 1 – How to highlight selected text via the Ribbon
- Select the text to be highlighted.
- Select Home tab > click the arrow in Text Highlight Color icon and click the desired highlight color. The currently selected color works as the default highlight color and is shown in the icon. If you want to apply that color, you can just click the icon. (To remove highlight, select No Color).
Figure 4. The Text Highlight Color options in the Home tab in the Ribbon.
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What is the default highlight color in Word?
The default highlight color in Word is the highlight color currently shown in the Text Highlight Color icon.
When you click one of the 15 colors or No Color, that color becomes the default highlight color.
The default highlight color will automatically be used by Word for the next highlight unless you select another color.
The DocTools HighlightManager add-in lets you use any highlight color without changing the default highlight color.
METHOD 2 – How to highlight selected text via the Mini Toolbar
If you have the Mini Toolbar enabled, you can also apply highlight via that toolbar:
- Select the text to be highlighted.
- In the Mini Toolbar that appears when you have selected text, click the arrow in the Text Highlight Color icon and click the desired highlight color. The currently selected color works as the default highlight color and is shown in the icon. If you want to apply that color, you can just click the icon. (To remove highlight, select No Color).
The highlight tools in the Mini Toolbar are identical to the ones on the Home tab in the Ribbon.
The Mini Toolbar only appears when you have selected text and if, at the same time, the option File > Options > General > Show Mini Toolbar on selection is turned on. See Figure 5 below.
Figure 5 The Mini Toolbar is only shown if the Show Mini Toolbar on selection option is turned on.
Figure 6. The Text Highlight Color options in the Mini Toolbar are the same as in the Home tab of the Ribbon.
METHOD 3 – How to highlight using a shortcut
Word has a default shortcut assigned to highlight:
- Alt+Ctrl+H
You can both apply highlight and remove highlight using the Alt-Ctrl-H shortcut. Note that this shortcut only works with the currently selected default highlight color so you still have to first make sure the desired color has been selected, either via the Home tab or the Mini Toolbar.
As opposed to how the Alt-Ctrl+H shortcut works, the DocTools HighlightManager add-in lets you assign shortcuts to each individual highlight color – customizable shortcuts have been assigned to the most useful highlight colors beforehand so they are ready for use at once. This means that the add-in makes it possible to apply any highlight color simply by pressing a keyboard shortcut without first switching color.
How the Alt+Ctrl+H shortcut works
You must select text before pressing the Alt+Ctrl+H shortcut. What happens when you press the shortcut depends on the situation. See the examples below:
Figure 7. No highlight applied to the selection beforehand.
EXAMPLE 1
If the selected text is not highlighted beforehand, Alt+Ctrl+H applies the highlight color that is currently selected as the default highlight color in Home tab > Text Highlight Color.
NOTE: If the currently selected default color is No Color, no highlight will be applied even if you press the shortcut.
Figure 8. Entire selection highlighted beforehand.
EXAMPLE 2
If the entire selected text is already highlighted (same color or mixed colors), Alt+Ctrl+H removes the highlight. This means that it works as a toggle: It adds or removes highlight depending of the selection.
Figure 9. The selected text is partly highlighted beforehand.
EXAMPLE 3
If the selected text is partly highlighted, i.e. some of the text is highlighted and other is not, Alt+Ctrl+H applies the highlight color that is currently selected as the default highlight color in Home tab > Text Highlight Color.
NOTE: If the currently selected default color is No Color, Alt+Ctrl+H removes highlight from the selection.
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METHOD 4 – How to highlight without first selecting text
If you click the Text Highlight Color icon on the Home tab or in the Mini Toolbar without first selecting text, the cursor changes to the icon shown below (enlarged here). You can then highlight text by dragging across the text that is to be highlighted.
NOTE: If you drag across text that is already highlighted, the highlight will be removed.
Figure 10. Highlighter icon
To exit the highlighter mode, do one of the following:
Press the Escape key OR
Click the Text Highlight Color icon on the Home tab or in the Mini Toolbar OR
Select Stop Highlighting from the Text Highlight Color tools on the Home tab or in the Mini Toolbar.
Note that the DocTools HighlightManager add-in lets you apply any highlight color to a paragraph without first selecting the entire paragraph – you only need to press a shortcut.
How to unhighlight in Word
Unhighlight is the same as removing highlight. See below.
How to stop highlighting in Word
If you click inside text that is highlighted and start typing, the new text you type will inherit the highlighting from the existing text. If you want to stop highlighting text when you type the new text, you can for example do as follows – all carried out via the keyboard:
- Type the first new character, then press and hold the Shift key and press the Left Arrow key to select the typed character.
- Press Alt+Ctrl+H to unhighlight the selected character you just typed.
- Press the Right Arrow key once to move after the typed character (or you can just delete the character when finished typing in step 3).
- Then continue to type the new text.
Getting rid of highlight may be referred to as either removing highlight or unhighlight. You may also think of it as how to remove highlighted text in word even if you want to keep the text and only make the highlighting go away.
To get rid of highlight in Word – or unhighlight – you can follow the steps described for applying highlight using METHOD 1, METHOD 2, METHOD 3 or METHOD 4 above but with the difference, that you select No Color instead of one of the 15 colors.
The DocTools HighlightManager add-in provides tools that let you quickly remove highlight either from the selection or from all paragraph(s) that are fully or partly included in the selection. This means that you don’t need to spend time on first selecting the entire paragraphs to remove highlight.
How to remove highlight from a paragraph number or bullet
If you are working with Word documents with automatic numbering, you may have struggled with how to unhighlight a number in Word. The same may be true for bullets in bulleted paragraphs.
Paragraph marks and trailing spaces (spaces at the end of a paragraph) never show highlight. However, they may be highlighted – but you can’t see it.
If only the number or bullet of a paragraph is highlighted, it is because the paragraph mark of that paragraph is highlighted.
To remove highlight from a number or from a bullet, select the paragraph mark and remove the highlight. You can also select the entire paragraph or the last part of the paragraph as long as you make sure the paragraph mark is included in the selection. Then the highlight will disappear from the number/bullet. See the illustration below.
TIP: Turn on formatting marks (Ctrl+Shift+8) so you can see the paragraph marks and other non-printing characters. Paragraph marks look like this: ¶
Figure 11. To remove highlight from a number or bullet, select the paragraph mark and unhighlight it.
The DocTools HighlightManager add-in provides a tool that lets you quickly remove highlight from numbered or bulleted paragraphs. You only need to click a button to remove highlight from any bullet or number in the selection or in the entire document.
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How to remove light yellow highlight that does not disappear when selecting No Color
You may experience that you open a document in which some areas are highlighted with a light or pale yellow color (see figure 12 below). The color differs from the bright yellow color in the highlight color palette. If you try to remove the light, yellow highlight by selecting No Color from the highlight palette, nothing happens.
Such pale, yellow highlight is most likely a result of the document being protected. The yellow color is used to show which areas of the document you can edit. You can turn off the highlight but it will be turned on again if you close and reopen the document. As opposed to normal highlight colors, the light, yellow color does not print. It is shown on the screen only.
Figure 12. Example of light, yellow highlight that shows which areas you can edit in a protected document.
To remove the light yellow highlight:
- In the Ribbon, select Review tab > Restrict Editing.
- In the Restrict Editing pane that opens, turn off Highlight the regions I can edit. See figure 13 below.
You can also open the Restrict Editing pane from the Developer tab > Restrict Editing.
Figure 13. To remove the light, yellow highlight, turn off Highlight the regions I can edit.
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How to replace highlight colors in a document
You can use Find in Word to search for highlight. You can also use Find and Replace to e.g. search for highlight and remove it or to apply highlight to a search string – or to replace one highlight color with another. See the examples below about how you can use Find and Find and Replace in relation to highlight.
How to find highlight
As you will learn below, the built-in functionality of Word does not let you search for a specific highlight color. As opposed to that, the DocTools HighlightManager add-in lets you find any specific highlight color.
Word does not let you search for specific highlight colors.
If two or more paragraphs in succession are highlighted, Word will not find them as one instance of highlight. Word interprets each paragraph as one instance of highlighting. This means that Word finds highlight in one paragraph at a time.
To find highlight in Word using the Find and Replace dialog box:
- Press Ctrl+H to open the Find and Replace dialog box. If you only want to find highlight, you can use the Find tab in the dialog box. If you want to replace highlight, make sure the Replace tab is selected.
- To find highlight, make sure the insertion point is in the Find what field.
- To expand the dialog box so all options are shown, click the More button.
- Select Format (bottom of dialog box) > Highlight. The word «Highlight» will now be shown below the Find what field. See Figure 15 below.
- If you want to find highlight no matter the text, leave the Find what field empty, otherwise enter the relevant text.
- Add other search criteria as needed and use the buttons in the dialog box to find and/or replace.
TIP: You can find both Highlight and Not highlight
If you select Highlight from the Format menu in the Find and Replace dialog box twice, the text below the Find what or Replace with field changes from Highlight to Not highlight. See Figure 15 below.
This means that you can search for and replace with both highlight and no highlight.
If you select Format > Highlight a third time, Not highlight is cleared.
To clear all Format criteria from the Find what or Replace with field, click in the relevant field, then click the No Formatting button. Alternatively, press Ctrl+Spacebar to clear the formatting.
Figure 14. The Find and Replace dialog box lets you search for or replace with Highlight.
Figure 15. Example: You can search for Highlight and replace with Not Highlight.
How to replace one highlight color with another
You may sometimes want to change highlight color in Word.
You can use the Find and Replace command to replace one highlight color with another. To do this:
- Select the new highlight color you want as the default highlight color (via the Text Highlight Color in the Home tab or the Mini Toolbar).
- Press Ctrl+H to open the Find and Replace dialog box.
- In both Find what and Replace with, add Highlight (see How to find highlight above for help. Leave the text fields empty unless you want to search for specific text and/or replace with other text.
- If you want to replace any highlight, no matter the color, with the new color, click Replace All. If you only want to replace a specific color, use the Find Next button and click Replace only if relevant – repeat Find Next.
As opposed to the built-in functionality in Word, the DocTools HighlightManager add-in lets you find any specific highlight color and replace it with any other highlight color, leaving all other colors unchanged.
The DocTools HighlightManager add-in also has a Find command that finds the next highlight in the document without you needing to set up the search in the Find or Find and Replace dialog box.
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How to copy only the highlighted text to another document
The built-in functionality of Word does not have a special feature for copying only highlighted text.
You could save a copy of the document and use Find and Replace to delete all text that is not highlighted. To do that:
- Press Ctrl+H to open the Find and Replace dialog box.
- Click in the Find what field and select Format > Highlight twice until the text Not highlight is shown below the field. Leave the field empty.
- In the Replace with field, type ^p in the field.
The ^p replaces the found non-highlighted text with a paragraph mark. This will split the remaining highlighted text in paragraphs. Otherwise, the result could be that many highlighted instances end in one paragraph. - Click Replace All.
The result may not always be useful since all the highlighted text remains with context.
The DocTools HighlightManager add-in includes a command for extracting highlight to a new document. Using that command, you can quickly create a document that includes the highlight, incl. metadata about each found instance.
Troubleshooting highlight
PROBLEM 1 – Highlight it is not visible on the screen
If you apply a highlight color to selected text and no color appears, the problem is likely to be one of the following:
- You have selected No Color instead of a color.
- The selection if of a type that can’t be highlighted.
- The Show highlighter marks setting is turned OFF. See how to turn on highlight marks.
PROBLEM 2 – Why can’t I remove highlighting in Word?
If you try to remove highlight using the methods described above and if that doesn’t remove the color, the reason may be that the color is not applied using highlight.
See PROBLEM 4 below for further details about how to get rid of other types of colors than highlight.
PROBLEM 3 – How to remove yellow highlight in Word?
A yellow background color on text in Word may not always be highlight. If you try to remove highlight using the methods described above and if that doesn’t remove the yellow color, the reason may be that the color is not applied using highlight.
See PROBLEM 4 below for further details about how to get rid of other types of colors than highlight.
PROBLEM 4 – The color doesn’t disappear when I attempt to remove highlight
What to do if you can’t remove highlighting in word? The reason may be that what looks like highlighting isn’t highlighting at all but another type of coloring.
If you select text that seems to be highlighted and try to remove the highlight and if this does not make the color go away, the reason may be that it is not highlight but one of the following:
- The color is a warm yellow highlight color added by the Find feature
- The color is color shading
- The color is light yellow and is showing which areas you can edit in a protected document
- The color is light gray field shading making it possible to distinguish fields from normal text
- The color is light gray Form Field shading making it possible to see where to fill in fields
See below for help on how to remove the five types of color.
How to remove yellow highlight added by the Find feature
If you use the Find feature in the Navigation Pane, Word highlights all occurrences that match your search criteria. You can, for example, remove the highlight by pressing the Escape key once.
How to remove color shading
- Selected the text from which you want to remove the color shading.
- Select Home tab > Paragraph group > Shading menu > No Color.
Note that shading can be applied to part of a paragraph, entire paragraphs, table cells, or entire tables. However, selecting No Color from the Paragraph group can remove shading from any of the types.
How to remove the light yellow color from a protected document
See how you remove light yellow highlight from a protected document above.
How to remove gray field shading
In documents with fields, I recommend having field shading set to always be displayed. The shading is visible on the screen only and does not print (more information about field shading). However, you can turn off field shading or set it to be displayed only on field(s) that are selected:
- Select File > Options > Advanced.
- In the Show document content group, select Field shading > Never or When selected.
- Click OK.
Figure 16. Example of a field with fields shading.
I strongly recommend having field shading shown always. If you can’t distinguish fields from other content, you risk making manual changes inside fields. The result will be that such changes are gone when you update fields.
How to remove gray Form Field shading
Word documents that are created as forms that are to be filled in by users may be created using a special type of fields: Form Fields. In newer versions of Word, forms that use Form Fields are referred to as Legacy Forms since Word now also lets you create forms using content controls.
If you see gray shading that can’t be removed using any of the methods above, Form Fields may be in use. You can quickly find out by pressing Alt+F9 to show field codes. If the areas with the gray shading now appear as { FORMTEXT }, { FORMCHECKBOX }, or { FORMDROPDOWN }, Form Fields are in use.
Figure 17. Example of Form Field without and with Form Field shading and example of Form Field showing field code.
It is practical to have Form Field shading turned on since it makes it easy to see where to fill in data. However, you can turn the Form Field shading off:
- On the Developer tab > Controls group, click Legacy Tools.
- Click the Form Field Shading icon to turn off the shading of Form Fields.
If you can’t see the Developer tab, see How to show the Developer tab in Word.
Figure 18. Form Field shading can be turned on and off via Developer tab > Controls group > Legacy Tools.
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PROBLEM 5 – No highlight is applied when I press Alt+Ctrl+H
As explained above, Alt+Ctrl+H is the default shortcut assigned to highlight. If you press Alt+Ctrl+H and nothing happens, the problem is likely to be one of the following:
- You have not selected any text or the selection if of a type that can’t be highlighted.
- The currently selected highlight color in Home tab > Text Highlight Color is No Color,
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PROBLEM 6 – How to customize highlight color in Word?
The quick answer is: You can’t create custom highlight colors in Word. The colors are restricted to the 15 colors shown in Figure 4 above.
You might use color shading instead of highlight. When it comes to color shading, you can define any color you want. However, highlighting and color shading are very different as explained above.
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How to apply or remove highlight via macros (VBA)
Below, you will find small examples of macro code related to highlight. If you record a macro in Word to find out what code to use for highlighting, the result is macro code that also changes the default highlight color to the color you apply. As you will see in the code samples below, you can apply or remove highlight via VBA without changing the default color.
EXAMPLE 1: Apply yellow highlight to the selection without changing the default highlight color that is shown in the Text Highlight Color icon:
Selection.Range.HighlightColorIndex = wdYellow
EXAMPLE 2: Remove highlight from the selection without changing the default highlight color that is shown in the Text Highlight Color icon:
Selection.Range.HighlightColorIndex = wdNoHighlight
EXAMPLE 3: Select bright green as the default highlight color that will be shown in the Text Highlight Color icon:
Options.DefaultHighlightColorIndex = wdBrightGreen
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Highlight can be useful in many Word documents, not least during the editing process. This article has explained how highlight in Word works. You have learnt how to highlight, how to remove highlight / unhighlight, how to solve different problems with highlight, etc. I hope this article helps you work more efficiently with highlight in Word.
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You’ve seen printed documents with sections of text that had been highlighted with a marker in yellow or some color. You can highlight text in MS Word documents without printing them out and using a marker. Keep reading to find out how.
Table of Contents
How to highlight text in MS Word
We’ll look at two types of highlighting. The first is highlighting one or more words alone or within a sentence.
Highlight one or more words in Word
To highlight text in Microsoft Word, select the text you wish to highlight. Then:
- Open the Home tab of the ribbon.
- In the first section of the Home tab you’ll see the Paste section. The next section to the right is the text section where you can change fonts, font sizes, and more. In this section look for a small icon on the bottom row that looks like a tiny marker above a colored line.
- Click that marker icon to open a panel of colors you can select to highlight your text.
- Choose a color.
You should now see your text highlighted with the color you chose. Word is actually placing a colored background behind those words that you selected. The remainder of the sentence will not be highlighted.
NOTE: If you have your computer set to dark mode, you may have white text on a dark background. In this case, some highlight colors may be barely visible or not at all against the dark background. However, if you print the page or view it in light mode with a white background, you will see that the highlight is indeed there.
Highlight an entire paragraph in Microsoft Word
You can easily highlight an entire paragraph or more in MS Word using the previously mentioned method of selecting all of the words in the section you wish to highlight, then using the highlight button.
Highlight words, sentences, or paragraphs in MS Word using Shading
The second type of highlighting we’ll learn allows us to highlight the full width of the entire paragraph block.
Word provides another method of highlighting single words, entire sentences, and paragraphs, but it calls it shading. Here are some differences between highlighting and shading.
- More colors are available with shading than when you use the highlight button in the Home tab.
- Shading allows you to highlight words with a patterned color. Basic highlighting allows colors only.
- Highlighting all of the text using the select and highlight method mentioned previously highlights only the text and the blanks between words. It does not highlight the entire margin to margin block that shading provides.
- Shading can be used to place a color background behind an entire paragraph from left margin to right margin even if it is a one word sentence. If your document or design called for it, you could have two or three words centered with a rectangle shaped background from left margin to right margin.
You’ll find the Shade function hidden away under the Design tab. With the Design tab open, look all the way to the right for a button/icon labeled Page Borders. If you mouse over that button, the tooltip will say Borders and Shading.
To shade specific words:
- Select the text.
- Under the Design tab, click the button labeled Page Borders on the right end of the ribbon.
- From the box that opens, select the Shading tab.
- On the left side, click inside the box below the Fill label.
- Choose your shade (highlight) color. If you don’t see exactly the color you need, select the More Colors… button below the current color choices. From there you can find practically any color you could wish for.
- On the right side, you should see a square with your selected words in it. Below that square, click in the box to choose Text or Paragraph.
- To highlight only the text you’ve selected, choose Text. To highlight the entire paragraph block which extends from the left margin beyond the last word to the right margin, choose Paragraph.
I’ve included photos of a Microsoft Word document that illustrates the use of the different highlighting and shading uses that I’ve discussed in this article.
I consider the Word’s shading function to be more useful than the highlighting function if you need any more than the most basic highlighting—select a word and highlight it with one of fifteen colors.
With a little forethought, the shading function can be quite useful in laying out a document with accented sentences, creating signs, or designing pamphlets.
You can find more tips for using Microsoft Word here.
You’ll find video tips for using Microsoft 365 here.
If you want to emphasize important text within a Microsoft Word document so that it’s not overlooked by the reader, you can use Word’s highlighting tool. You can also search for highlighted text within the document. Here’s how.
Highlight Text in a Word Document
You can easily highlight specific text in Microsoft Word. To do so, open a Word document that contains the text you want to highlight. You’ll need to select the text by clicking and dragging your cursor over the text.
Once you select the text, a pop-up menu will appear above the selected text. Click the down arrow next to the “Text Highlight Color” icon to display a drop-down menu with several colors to choose from. You can also find this option in the “Font” group of the “Home” tab.
Click the highlight color to apply it to the text. Light color highlights print better with monochrome palettes and printers.
You can also consecutively highlight text in multiple parts of a document. To do this, select your highlight color from the “Font” group of the “Home” tab before selecting the text you want to highlight.
After you select the highlight color, your cursor will become a highlighter. You can now continually highlight text throughout the document.
Press the “Esc” key on your keyboard to exit highlight mode.
RELATED: How to Highlight Text in Your PowerPoint Presentation
Remove Highlighting From Text in a Word Document
You can also remove the highlighting from text in a Microsoft Word document. To do this, click and drag your mouse over the highlighted text to select it. If your Word document contains a lot of highlighted text and you want to remove all of the highlights, you can press Ctrl+A to select all of the text in the document.
Next, click the “Text Highlight Color” icon in the “Font” group of the “Home” tab and then select “No Color” from the drop-down menu.
The highlight is now removed from the text.
Search for Highlighted Text in a Word Document
If your Microsoft Word document is long and you want to quickly find highlighted text, you can use the advanced search function.
Open your Word document that contains the highlighted text and select the down arrow next to “Find” in the “Editing” group of the “Home” tab. Next, click “Advanced Find” in the drop-down menu.
The “Find and Replace” window will appear. In the “Find” tab, select the “More” option.
In the “Find” section, select the “Format” option. Next, click “Highlight” in the drop-down menu.
You can now find each instance of highlighted text by clicking the “Find Next” button.
Highlighted text, when used properly, allows the reader to quickly grab important information from your Microsoft Word document without having to read the text in its entirety. Be mindful of the text you highlight within your content.
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Please Note:
This article is written for users of the following Microsoft Word versions: 97, 2000, 2002, and 2003. If you are using a later version (Word 2007 or later), this tip may not work for you. For a version of this tip written specifically for later versions of Word, click here: Highlighting Text Using the Keyboard Only.
Written by Allen Wyatt (last updated December 26, 2020)
This tip applies to Word 97, 2000, 2002, and 2003
Frank noted that it seems the Highlight tool is only accessible by using the mouse. He prefers to not use the mouse, preferring the keyboard instead. He wondered if there was a way to highlight selected words using just the keyboard.
Before answering, there is something that needs to be clarified: There is some ambiguity when it comes to the word «highlight.» For instance, if I say I am going to highlight a word, some people think that means I am going to double-click the word. This isn’t highlighting; it is selecting. In Word parlance, the two words have very specific meanings. You select text before you are going to do something with it, such as applying an editing or formatting command. Highlighting, on the other hand, is a formatting task accomplished by using the Highlight tool. (The Highlight tool is available on the Formatting toolbar. It is analogous to a highlighter you use to mark text on a printed page.) In short, you first select text, and then you highlight the selected text by using the Highlight tool.
The ambiguity around the word «highlight» was evident when WordTips subscribers were asked how they can highlight text using the keyboard only, and not the mouse. Many were quick to respond with ways that told how to use the keyboard to select text, such as holding down the Shift key while using the arrow keys or using any number of other selection methods. While this is helpful, it is only part of the solution. The other part deals with how you can actually highlight whatever text has been selected, using just the keyboard.
Word provides no built-in shortcut that will apply a highlight to text, but you can easily create your own shortcut by following these steps:
- Choose Customize from the Tools menu. Word displays the Customize dialog box.
- Click on the Keyboard button. Word displays the Customize Keyboard dialog box. (See Figure 1.)
- Using the Categories list, choose All Commands.
- Using the Commands list, choose Highlight.
- Position the insertion point in the Press New Shortcut Key text box.
- Press the shortcut key you want to use for highlighting. For instance, you might want to press Alt+H.
- Click Assign. This assigns the shortcut key to the Highlight command.
- Click on OK to dismiss the Customize Keyboard dialog box.
- Click on OK to dismiss the Customize dialog box.
Figure 1. The Customize Keyboard dialog box.
You can now use the shortcut key you specified in step 6 to highlight any text you’ve selected.
WordTips is your source for cost-effective Microsoft Word training.
(Microsoft Word is the most popular word processing software in the world.)
This tip (526) applies to Microsoft Word 97, 2000, 2002, and 2003. You can find a version of this tip for the ribbon interface of Word (Word 2007 and later) here: Highlighting Text Using the Keyboard Only.
Author Bio
With more than 50 non-fiction books and numerous magazine articles to his credit, Allen Wyatt is an internationally recognized author. He is president of Sharon Parq Associates, a computer and publishing services company. Learn more about Allen…
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