
Print slides with or without speaker notes - Microsoft Support
Under Settings, click the second box (which defaults to say Full Page Slides), then under Print Layout, click Notes Pages. Notes Pages prints one slide per page, with speaker notes below.
Print your PowerPoint slides, handouts, or notes
In PowerPoint, you can print your slides, your speaker notes, and create handouts for your audience.
Print speaker notes - Microsoft Support
You can print your speaker notes, with or without thumbnail images of the corresponding slides, and hand them out to your audience to view after your presentation.
Print your handouts, notes, or slides - Microsoft Support
To print slide notes, either for a speaker or as handouts for your audience, select Notes Pages under Print Layout. This option prints one slide per page with all your notes below.
Create and print notes pages - Microsoft Support
Print notes pages with slide thumbnails You can print your notes pages with a slide thumbnail to hand out to your audience or to help you prepare for your presentation.
Add speaker notes to your slides - Microsoft Support
When you're creating a presentation, you can add speaker notes to refer to later while delivering the slide show in front of an audience.
Fix broken notes pages in PowerPoint - Microsoft Support
Go to File > Print > Printer Properties. Note: Depending upon your print driver you might have to click Advanced to see the paper size setting. Change the paper size to anything other than Letter, then …
Print handouts using Adobe Reader - Microsoft Support
When you print handouts, PowerPoint for the web makes a PDF copy of your presentation file. With most PDF viewers, you'll get one slide per page with no headers or footers.
Start the presentation and see your notes in Presenter view
Using Presenter view is a great way to view your presentation with speaker notes on one computer (your laptop, for example), while only the slides themselves appear on the screen that your audience sees …
Workaround for printing slides without white edges
This limitation stems from the design of most printers that don't print content in the margins. PowerPoint can’t change this printer-margin limitation, but here's a workaround you can try.