Hello christu & wlecome to the forum!
The real question here is - 'Why do you need to put the songs in Word?' Using the little 'print' icon on the song's page will print the song just like it appears on the screen. If you want to edit the content or appearance of the song, you can do that using the 'edit' button at the end of the song's listing in your songbook. Likewise, if you want to share the song with a friend, the 'e-mail' button send a link.
When you copy a chordpro-formatted song off chordie and into Word, you will see song in it's 'raw' form (chords embedded within the lyric along with some other strange sights). This is called chordpro format - it is a way of making a song so that it can be converted into the nice layout that appears on your screen.
Chordpro allows the song's chords to be transposed and enables other nice features. Believe it or not, it is a very efficient and flexible system. If the raw song file is coded correctly, the conversion yields a nice, easily-readable page with chord grids and other nifty-keeno doo-dads. Chordpro also allow the chords to be precisely postioned within the lyric (rather than using tabs or spaces above the lyric line).
Some song files in chordie's index are not in chordpro style - perhaps the songs you were copying into Word several months ago were not chordpro style? If that is the case, they would have transferred into Word with no changes in appearance.
So, basically - the answer is 'If a song is in chordpro, it will look funny in Word'. You can still put the songs into Word, but why bother?
Sorry my resonse is so long - hope it helps!
James McCormick
"That darn Pythagorean Comma thing keeps messing me up!"
[url]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pythagorean_comma[/url]