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Assuming that you are using a Page Breakpage break on your title page, then

  1. Insert your table after the title (I'd insert it on a new line so that it doesn't have the title's style)
  2. Right click the table and select Table“Table Properties....
  3. In Tablethe “Table” tab, Text wrapping“Text wrapping”, select Around“Around”, which makes the nearby Positioning“Positioning... button active.
  4. In Positioningthe “Positioning” dialog, select vertical position as Bottom“Bottom” relative to Margin“Margin”.

When adding new lines to the table, it should now grow upward.

Assuming that you are using a Page Break on your title page, then

  1. Insert your table after the title (I'd insert it on a new line so that it doesn't have the title's style)
  2. Right click the table and select Table Properties....
  3. In Table tab, Text wrapping select Around, which makes the nearby Positioning... button active.
  4. In Positioning dialog select vertical position as Bottom relative to Margin.

When adding new lines to table it should now grow upward.

Assuming that you are using a page break on your title page, then

  1. Insert your table after the title (I'd insert it on a new line so that it doesn't have the title's style)
  2. Right click the table and select “Table Properties....
  3. In the “Table” tab, “Text wrapping”, select “Around”, which makes the nearby “Positioning... button active.
  4. In the “Positioning” dialog, select vertical position as “Bottom” relative to “Margin”.

When adding to the table, it should now grow upward.

Assuming that you are using a Page BreakPage Break on your title page, then

  1. Insert your table after the title (I'd insert it on a new line so that it doesn't have the title's style)
  2. Right click the table and select Table Properties...Table Properties....
  3. In TableTable tab, Text wrappingText wrapping select AroundAround, which makes the nearby Positioning...Positioning... button active.
  4. In PositioningPositioning dialog select vertical position as BottomBottom relative to MarginMargin.

When adding new lines to table it should now grow upward.

Assuming that you are using a Page Break on your title page, then

  1. Insert your table after the title (I'd insert it on a new line so that it doesn't have the title's style)
  2. Right click the table and select Table Properties....
  3. In Table tab, Text wrapping select Around, which makes the nearby Positioning... button active.
  4. In Positioning dialog select vertical position as Bottom relative to Margin.

When adding new lines to table it should now grow upward.

Assuming that you are using a Page Break on your title page, then

  1. Insert your table after the title (I'd insert it on a new line so that it doesn't have the title's style)
  2. Right click the table and select Table Properties....
  3. In Table tab, Text wrapping select Around, which makes the nearby Positioning... button active.
  4. In Positioning dialog select vertical position as Bottom relative to Margin.

When adding new lines to table it should now grow upward.

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Assuming that you are using a Page Break on your title page, then

  1. Insert your table after the title (I'd insert it on a new line so that it doesn't have the title's style)
  2. Right click the table and select Table Properties....
  3. In Table tab, Text wrapping select Around, which makes the nearby Positioning... button active.
  4. In Positioning dialog select vertical position as Bottom relative to Margin.

When adding new lines to table it should now grow upward.