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Please note that other Pearson websites and online products and services have their own separate privacy policies. This privacy notice provides an overview of our commitment to privacy and describes how we collect, protect, use and share personal information collected through this site. If this is a big concern for you, then I'd suggest defining styles for your shading, since you can always search for specific styles.Pearson Education, Inc., 221 River Street, Hoboken, New Jersey 07030, (Pearson) presents this site to provide information about products and services that can be purchased through this site. One of the formatting attributes that you can search for is if the text is highlighted, but you cannot search for shading applied to text. There is only one downside that I can find to using shading to highlight text, and that has to do with Find and Replace. Or, if you prefer, you can bypass macros altogether and simply create a character style that applies the desired shading to selected text. With the macro in place, you can assign it to a shortcut key or to a toolbar button so you can apply your own "highlighting" whenever you want. BackgroundPatternColor = wdColorLightYellow ForegroundPatternColor = wdColorAutomatic The following macro applies pale yellow shading to the selected text. If you find a color you like to use a lot, you can create a macro that applies the shading to the selected text. Word then applies the selected color to the selected text, and it looks exactly like what you apply using the Highlight tool. (If you'd like to choose from more colors, click the More Colors button.) From the colors displayed, select the one you want to use.The Shading tab of the Borders and Shading dialog box. Make sure the Shading tab is displayed.Word displays the Borders and Shading dialog box. Choose Borders and Shading from the Format menu.(The colors appear to be hard-wired into Word.) You can, however, highlight text in a different way, if you prefer: by using shading. The colors used for highlighting cannot be changed beyond what is offered in the fifteen colors. Word allows you to pick any of fifteen different colors. The default color for highlighting is yellow, but you can change the color if you click the down-arrow to the right of the Highlight tool on the Formatting toolbar. Word provides a highlighter tool that allows you to.well, "highlight" text, much as you would do with a highlighter pen on a printed document.