No!
automobile, steam engine
two words it hasn't
i believe the steam engine provide faster transportation of goods and people and people could coal mine easier.
James Watt was the name of that scientist.
A steam engine is an external combustion engine. As the steam engine combusts outside of the engine itself.
No, the compound noun "steam engine" is a common noun, a general word for a device used to generate power by the use of steam; a word for any steam engine of any kind.A proper noun is the name or title of a specific person, place, or thing; for example, Steam Engine USA (company) in Providence, RI or "A Short History of the Steam Engine" by Henry Winram Dickinson.
A rotary steam engine was a fire engine basically
It is called "Tornado"
Steam is created in a steam engine by heating water in a boiler until it turns into steam. The steam then builds up pressure, which is used to power the engine and drive machinery.
Steam trains were once widespread, and changed the world. A steam engine is an external combustion engine, meaning that the fuel burns outside the engine. In modern internal combustion engines the petrol or diesel burns inside the engine, and the gases produced expand and push the cylinders, and this motion eventually turns the wheels. In the steam engine the fuel burns in an external fire box. The heat boils the water to make steam, which pushes the cylinders. So it depends exactly what you mean by 'run'. Certainly there were and are steam trains, but the steam doesn't provide the energy to make it go, the fuel does.
the steam engine was improved in 1769.
A steam engine?