The both shortcuts you have asked for are for alignments.
ctrl+q results in an text-alignment known an 'blockquote'. This quote in a document is usually inserted as a separate segment of text, rather than given inline with quotation marks around it. A blockquote is left-indented with respect to the enclosing text and has white-space before and after it. The blockquote may also be in a different typeface from the enclosing text.
ctrl+l results in left-alignment of the text.
You may not notice the changes of these shortcuts because they both align the text to left side, which is default one. But once you are using right-alignment (ctrl+R) or center-alignment (ctrl+E) and then use those shortcuts, you can see the change.
I hope this was what you were queried about........ ;-D
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Verified answer
Ctrl + Q: Reset Paragraph Format
Ctrl + T: Hanging Indent
See this link for a list of keyboard shortcuts for Word:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/290938
The both shortcuts you have asked for are for alignments.
ctrl+q results in an text-alignment known an 'blockquote'. This quote in a document is usually inserted as a separate segment of text, rather than given inline with quotation marks around it. A blockquote is left-indented with respect to the enclosing text and has white-space before and after it. The blockquote may also be in a different typeface from the enclosing text.
ctrl+l results in left-alignment of the text.
You may not notice the changes of these shortcuts because they both align the text to left side, which is default one. But once you are using right-alignment (ctrl+R) or center-alignment (ctrl+E) and then use those shortcuts, you can see the change.
I hope this was what you were queried about........ ;-D
On Microsoft Word, believe it or not, the key combination for finding a word or phrase is Ctrl+F.
They really don't do anything. And if you thought they did something then why don't you just test it yourself?