

If you don't want to copy explicit formatting to your target document, the best way is to not use the regular Paste function (or Ctrl+V). If, however, your target used Arial as a default font, but you had explicitly changed it to italics Palatino, then both the font (Palatino) and the attribute (italics) are copied to the target. Why? Because your explicit formatting (bold) was copied-nothing else. For instance, if the source is formatted as bold Arial (and Arial is the default font for the source paragraph), and you copy it to the target where Courier is the default font, then you end up with bold Courier. (For instance, you used the tools on the ribbon to format the text instead of relying on styles.) In this case, the formatting of your target will copy to the destination, but not always with the results you expect. The only exception to this style-conflict problem is if you have explicitly applied formatting to the source text. Click OK to close the Modify Style dialog box.Make sure the Add to Template check box is selected or the New Documents Based on this Template radio button (depending on which version of Word you're using).The Modify Style dialog box again appears. Change the font settings to what you want and click OK.Click on the Format button, then choose the Font option.Word displays the Modify Style dialog box. Click the down arrow and choose Modify.You should see a drop-down arrow appear at the right side of the style name. In the list of available styles, hover the mouse pointer over the Normal style.Click the small icon at the bottom-right of the Styles group.How you do this depends on the version of Word you are using. Now that you understand how Word treats text being pasted into a document, you can make it behave differently by simply changing the way the Normal style is formatted. If you have simply selected all the text in your target document and changed it from Courier to Arial at some time in the past, you still have not redefined the Normal style, and new text will still be affected by it. So if the Normal style uses an Arial font in your source document and the Normal style uses a Courier font in your target document, when you paste a paragraph from the source to the target, it takes on the appearance of Courier font. You are using styles whether you want to or not, because Word relies on the Normal style (which is predefined) as the default paragraph style. When you copy a paragraph from one document into another and it takes on a different appearance, the primary reason is because the paragraph being formatted is using a style name already defined in the new document, and that style uses different character formatting. Understanding how this relationship works can help you understand what will happen to your pasted information. This is due to the way in which Word treats styles and their relation to formatting. If you are copying a paragraph from one document to another, you may have noticed some strange font changes that occur in your pasted information.
