Re. your comment. That shouldn't happen. Is the version of Times New Roman that you are using a Postscript font? You might be using an old TrueType font that came with Word, or a newer TrueType font that is rendered as an Open Type font. Make sure you only have ONE version (preferably an Open Type version) of Times New Roman open and active on your machine and try the conversion again. If you can't manage that, or it still doesn't work correctly, try another oldstyle typeface such as Baskerville Old Face, Garamond, or Goudy--all three of those come with Word, so you should have them. That said, Word is not a page layout program, and it sometimes renders PDFs erratically. (I've had to use Word from time to time to layout a book, and I've found lines slipping from one page to the next, or sometimes a line at the top or bottom of a page goes missing.) So be sure to check your results carefully.
This is a very quick method that you can try for converting Word to PDF. To create word files to PDF is very simple, you just need a Word document, and then you just change to the right side of the PDF document and select text from the right side of the PDF (in this case the right side of the Word document). To save the converted Word document files in a folder, you just need to go to the folder created by converting Word document files into PDF file (called “Convert Files To PDF”). There are a lot of other ways. Many of these methods can be used for converting audio files, and even the process for creating PDF has similar steps. These are just some method to convert Word to PDF using quick steps in Windows PC. If you have any idea about how to create Word to PDF.