Add Music to MS Word 2007 Documents
Posted on February 19, 2010 at 5:09 am
As a writer, the moments when you write something so wonderful that you cannot help but grin and think this rocks! are few and far between. It is not that we are bad writers, it is more that inspiration and confidence are fleeting.
But, even when our writing does not rock in the metaphorical sense, we can certainly make it rock in the literal sense.
Word 2007 allows us to add almost any kind of file to a Word document—even sound files. The commands to do this are buried deep within the recesses of the insert menu, but once discovered, they can bring music to the dullest of documents.
First, move your cursor to the place in your document where you want the sound file to appear. Then, click the insert tab at the top of the screen.
Click the the text icon, and choose object.
In the window that opens, click create from file.
Click browse and find the sound file you want to add to your document. Once you have found and opened the file, click ok.
Your sound file will now appear in your document with a speaker icon. If you click the speaker icon, your song will play.
Besides adding music to your documents, a more practical use for this tool might be adding spoken dialogue to explain things where vocal tone is more effective than the written word. Whatever you use this trick for, remember sound files can be quite large, and will add download time if emailing your document.
» Filed Under MS Office Tips
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Whoa! Those are some cool MS Word tricks. Thanks for mentioning.
While reading your article, I was wondering what could be use of such a thing. But you appropriately answered that towards the end. Nice feature.