The question is not opinion based; it is however, squarely off topic (according to the following close reason):
Questions about general computing hardware and software are off-topic for Stack Overflow unless they directly involve tools used primarily for programming (emphasis added).
Yes, it's an interesting question; but it's still off topic. Not 'Gee, it's tangentially related to programming' off-topic, just "This isn't even in the realm of things we are concerned with on this site" off-topic.
To address the concerns brought up in the comments:
Word may not be a tool used to program, but it, like other Office apps, is a platform for add-in development. If the file format is relevant to anyone at all, it's to an add-in developer. See also the ooxml tag. - BoltClock♦ 14 hours ago
But the question isn't about having issues with add-on development for Word, or the file size of an OOXML
file causing issues. It's a general curiousity question whose answer doesn't have any programming relevance. If the question were scoped to "I see this tag (insert tag here) in a generated OOXML file, and I need to know what it does" that's both a reasonably scoped question, and a question whose answers will actually help others.
But this question is about the behaviour of [sic] word when used as a code generation tool, and about understanding its output in a way that could only possibly be relevant to a programmer [...]. – Mark Amery 14 hours ago
That's what's missing from this question: What behavior, and how that behavior relates to a programming problem.
The question, as posed, lacks any sort of reference or relevance to an actual programming problem. So what if the generated code is large? Why does that matter? What problem are you trying to solve where that matters? Are you trying to figure out what you can do to reduce it? Are you trying to parse out everything but what you believe a 'standard' HTML document needs? Those are answerable questions (I wrote a parser in Perl a long time ago to do just that), and they're things we can help you with.
This question is flatly off topic; interesting or not.
hello world
into Word, save, then look at the file size. And mind that if it's a .docx, it's zipped to begin with.