This tip ties in with the previous one, the difference between cutting and deleting. Suppose you're
working hard on a long Word document and you decide to delete (not cut) a paragraph. Later, you realize
that you need that item after all, but you deleted it, not cut. It's gone right? Well, not exactly.
If you discover you'd like it back fairly soon after you deleted it, you can choose "Edit" and "Undo"
(or Ctrl-Z) as many times as it takes to retrieve it. Then you can easily highlight it, and "Cut" (Ctrl-C)
and "Paste" (Ctrl-V) the item to where ever you'd like it to go.
However, if you realize you want it after a lot of serious editing, then "Undo-ing" back through all
this could be pretty cumbersome. Besides, then you'd have to redo all the good work you did following that
"delete". So..., if you'd really like to have that paragraph back, try this:
Choose File, Save As and save your document under a new name. Press Ctrl-Z (Undo) until the paragraph
reappears. Select the paragraph and press Ctrl-C to copy it. Open your original saved document (which will
not have these changes), click where you want the paragraph to appear, and press Ctrl-V to paste it. It may
seem like all that saving and opening is a lot of trouble, but it may be a lot quicker than going through
all that editing again.