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A typewriter is basically a predecessor top the modern printer, so yes, it uses paper.
Some words you can use with "typewriter" are keyboard, ribbon, keys, and vintage.
The typewriter is just like your modern, computer. Only the keys get higher, which makes it kind of difficult to use. It can really be as simple as getting a piece of paper, clipping it in, and pressing on the keys to make words!
What we wear now. THIS - NOW - TODAY is "modern days".
A slightly odd question! People obviously existed and work got done before the typewriter. Now that the vast majority of people who deal with text use computers, typewriters have largely fallen into disuse. So if your question is actually "is the typewriter necessary for modern business?" the answer is no.
The word typewriter is a singular, common, concrete noun, a thing. Typewriter can be used as the subject or the object of a sentence or phrase. Example sentence:The typewriter is becoming obsolete because the computer and word processing are becoming the norm.
Yes
because in early typewriter days, the alphabatized keyboard became too easy to use, so they rearranged the letters
The typewriter ribbon is the store of ink for the typewriter. When a typewriter key is pushed the letter springs up and hits the ribbon - pushing the ink onto the page in the shape of the letter.
the typewriter that kerouac used fromm 66 until his death was a Hermes 3000 manual typewriter that sold for $22,500.
The typewriter was invented by Christopher Sholes in 1868, so I imagine not too long after that people began to use them.
Dorothy Parker used a Corona typewriter. She was known to be very attached to her typewriter and even took it with her everywhere she went.