The longest well-known example is probably twelve-letter word stewardesses.
(a longer non-standard word is devertebrated)
Other uncommon words are the 14-letter words sweaterdresses, aftercataracts, and tesseradecades.
The 4 words in the lower left hand corner, next to the check, below where you type, is where you will find the button.
bare hands
The adjective is usually one word "handcrafted" or otherwise hyphenated hand-crafted (made by hand).
You can type any word using only your left hand.
The correct spelling is "available" (at hand, or unmarried).
lollipop but you can type the longest word with your right hand by moving it around the keyboard
It is called that because the first six letters on a standard keyboard are the letters Q, W, E, R, T, and Y.
lollipop is the longest word you can type with only your right hand Really, you can type the longest word in the world with your right hand by moving it around the keyboard.
The first name of the keyboard was called "Qwerty", you can actually see those letters on the top left hand corner of your keyboard too.
Those letters spell hand washing.
For proper keyboarding technique, one should use the right-hand shift when capitalizing letters typed by the left hand.
The longest words typable with only the left hand using conventional hand placement on a QWERTY keyboard are tesseradecades, aftercataracts, and the more common but sometimes hyphenated sweaterdresses. Using the right hand alone, the longest word that can be typed is johnny-jump-up, or, excluding hyphens, hypolimnion.
QWERTY--the top row of letters for the left hand
That will depend on the layout of the keyboard. For a standard keyboard the Home Key is in a block of 6 keys between the main keyboard and the numeric keypad. The 7 key on the numeric keypad also acts as a Home Key when Num Lock is off.
A mix of letters only including J, D, G and F. Clearly done by someone who hits multiple keys on the keyboard or done by sliding your hand across the keyboard.
When typing the words on your keyboard you spell lollipop with only your right hand and stewardess with only your left.
The keyboard was named after Dr. August Dvorak. In 1936, Dr. Dvorak came up with a plan to standardize the letter keys on the keyboard for a typewriter. The nickname for the Dvorak keyboard that is still used today is the QWERTY keyboard because of the placement of the left hand, top line letters.