1, the collation of a good noun has hundreds of, you need to set the beginning of each paragraph into bold words to highlight (see Figure 1), but one set is too troublesome.
Tips Tips
2. Because the Text conversion table feature only recognizes half-width symbols, if you are using a full-width colon, select Replace in the Edit Group on the Start tab. Enter a full-width colon in Find what in the Find and Replace window, and replace with to enter a half-angle colon, and then click Replace All to convert.
3. Press "CTRL + a" key to select all text, and then switch to the Insert tab. Click Table to select Text to table from the Drop-down list, choose the other characters option in the text-separated position in the pop-up window, and enter a half-width colon in the following input box (Figure 2). The number of rows can be calculated automatically by word, without input. Then when you click OK, the full text is converted into a table, and the 1th column of the table is the noun text to be bold at the beginning of each paragraph, and the 2nd column is the interpretation of the noun. All you have to do is point the mouse to the top of the 1th column, and when the cursor becomes the downward arrow, click to select all the nouns in the 1th column, and then you can set it to bold.
4. After setting up, position the input cursor in the table, switch to the Layout tab of the Table tool, and click Convert to Text. Select the other characters option in the table Convert to Text window and enter a half-width colon in the following input box (Figure 3). OK to revert to the original text, of course, now all nouns have been bold.
5, with this method of adding coarse nouns, if you also want to select all the noun changes in the format, just click on any one of the bold nouns on the right button to select "style → choose a similar format text" can quickly select all the nouns to set.
Tips Tips
6, if there is a colon in the interpretation, the converted table will have more than two columns, and a colon will appear at the end of each paragraph when you revert to text. Use the Find feature to replace ": ^p" with "^p" to quickly delete all the end of the line colon (where "^p" is "return").