 |
1 |  |  If you want to create slides from a Microsoft Word document, the document must be formatted as: |
|  | A) | Rich Text Format. |
|  | B) | A text file. |
|  | C) | An outline. |
|  | D) | An object. |
|
|
 |
2 |  |  PowerPoint interprets a Word Heading 2 Style as: |
|  | A) | First-level bulleted text. |
|  | B) | Second-level bulleted text. |
|  | C) | A slide subtitle. |
|  | D) | Plain text. |
|
|
 |
3 |  |  When you want two presentations displayed at the same time with layered windows and the presentation name in each title bar, choose this view: |
|  | A) | Cascade. |
|  | B) | Switch Windows. |
|  | C) | Arrange All. |
|  | D) | New Window. |
|
|
 |
4 |  |  To insert slides from one presentation to another when the presentations are side by side, copy the slide from the first presentation, go to the second presentation and click: |
|  | A) | Duplicate. |
|  | B) | Move. |
|  | C) | Ctrl+V. |
|  | D) | Ctrl+Z. |
|
|
 |
5 |  |  When you place an Excel worksheet into a PowerPoint presentation, the worksheet is the source file and the presentation is: |
|  | A) | The adaptive file. |
|  | B) | The destination file. |
|  | C) | The secondary file. |
|  | D) | The object. |
|
|
 |
6 |  |  When inserted data from an outside source is expected to change frequently, the best was to insert it into a slide is to: |
|  | A) | Embed. |
|  | B) | Link. |
|  | C) | Bookmark. |
|  | D) | Anchor. |
|
|
 |
7 |  |  When you open a presentation containing one or more links, Microsoft alerts you with a notice about: |
|  | A) | Conflicting data. |
|  | B) | Security concerns. |
|  | C) | Attachments. |
|  | D) | Mismatched hyperlinks. |
|
|
 |
8 |  |  If the location of a source or a destination file with a linked object changes, the link is: |
|  | A) | Modified. |
|  | B) | Replaced. |
|  | C) | Broken. |
|  | D) | Relinked. |
|
|
 |
9 |  |  If you're having trouble with the format of pasted text, try pasting the text using: |
|  | A) | Paste as picture. |
|  | B) | Keep text only. |
|  | C) | Copy formatting. |
|  | D) | Values only. |
|
|
 |
10 |  |  You can organize a lengthy presentation by dividing it into: |
|  | A) | Chapters. |
|  | B) | Frames. |
|  | C) | Topics. |
|  | D) | Sections. |
|
|
 |
11 |  |  When you are revising the slide order in a presentation the best view to use is: |
|  | A) | Notes Master. |
|  | B) | Slide Sorter. |
|  | C) | Sidebar. |
|  | D) | Slide Show. |
|
|
 |
12 |  |  The feature that automatically capitalizes the first letter of a sentence in your text is: |
|  | A) | AutoFill. |
|  | B) | AutoCorrect. |
|  | C) | Dictionary. |
|  | D) | Grammar check. |
|
|
 |
13 |  |  To reverse an automatic text correction, click: |
|  | A) | Backspace. |
|  | B) | Ctrl+Z. |
|  | C) | Delete. |
|  | D) | Ctrl+X. |
|
|
 |
14 |  |  The best presentation tool to use for finding dictionary definitions and language translation is the: |
|  | A) | Find and Replace window. |
|  | B) | Translation tab. |
|  | C) | Research pane. |
|  | D) | Custom dictionary. |
|
|
 |
15 |  |  To apply the same picture style settings on several images on your slide, use: |
|  | A) | The Design tab. |
|  | B) | The Duplicate menu. |
|  | C) | The Format Painter. |
|  | D) | Copy and Paste. |
|
|