The problem is you're trying to take code written to be displayed on a web browser and copy it to a program designed with largely pre-Internet uses in mind: a word processor. You're not copying the image: you're copying the code that refers to the image, and that's why it's not showing up. So, you can first copy the text, then individually save the images to your computer, then add them to the word document. If you want to regularly save articles you find on the web to Word, that's what you're to have to do. Alternatively, you can use a program built to grab articles from the web. Evernote makes this process as simple as a single click, and the result is a lot easier to browse than a series of word documents. That's what I do.
Set the defaults you want (I chose Keep Text Only for all) and click OK. Repeat for all of the Office applications you use regularly (Excel, PowerPoint and Word). If you decide that you want to maintain the original formatting for a specific paste, you can easily override it on a paste-by-paste basis. Jul 8, 2010 - You could then paste the picture, select it, and then run the macro. In your document, select it and run the macro to apply the 'default' settings. On the Mac version (Office 2011) F4 does not work, so Cmd - Y is the only option. Converting/pasting images in Word as an embedded picture and not a link.