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typewriter keyboard

n. a keyboard for manually entering characters to be printed

Usage examples of "typewriter keyboard".

Knowing now, as I did, what the conjecture was that Wolfe had been testing when he inspected my typewriter keyboard with the note from Mr Knapp in his hand, and therefore also knowing why I was to take Dinah Utley's prints, it wasn't necessary to write her name on the paper, but I did anyway.

As for the typewriter keyboard, your spouse's story is not far from the painful truth.

Congress's rejection of funds to develop a supersonic transport in 1971, the world's continued rejection of an efficiently designed typewriter keyboard, and Britain's long reluctance to adopt electric lighting.

A box like a small television set with a typewriter keyboard protruding forward from the lower edge of the screen.

The only thing I recognized was an electric typewriter keyboard, without a typewriter under it.

He turned away and pushed one of the buttons on what might have been an alien typewriter keyboard.

Then he put his fingers on his typewriter keyboard and took the incom-ing message.

The minute I looked away from my typewriter keyboard to glance at my steno pad, my breasts pushed between my hands, monopolizing the keys and driving my Selectric to distraction.

He wants to build an enormous typewriter keyboard with each key about the size of a dinner plate, and he would mount these keys on the wall of the study.

There were six wide rows of consoles, each with its own TV screen and typewriter keyboard supplemented by lighted plastic buttons, dials, headphone jacks, and analog and digital controls.

When she was finished, there was a muted clicking sound from the typewriter keyboard, as if the device was warming up.

There was the radar navigator's ten-inch radar scope and associated controls on the left side, plus a small video monitor beside it with a small typewriter keyboard.

Mma Makutsi looked at her, and then looked down at the typewriter keyboard.

The triple strands of wires seemed to be arranged for Cygnan convenience, probably reflecting frequency of use, like a typewriter keyboard.

Occasionally, McLanahan would call up a graphic typewriter keyboard and use it to compose satellite messages to the National Security Agency--heck, Jamieson mused wryly, McLanahan even used a weird layout, called a Dvorak keyboard, that he operated with speed and precision but would be three times as hard for anyone else to use.