Typewriter.
Words that can be made from AEHT, using each letter only once:A and THEAT and HEHATEHEAT
Using the keyboard to enter data into the computer, mainly made up of letters of the alphabet, hitting the key will make the corresponding symbol or letter come up on the computer.
There is not one. To the one who wrote 'There is not one', actually there is, the word is TYPEWRITER, 10 letters? Check. Using qwertyuiop? Check.
dose does odes
Since we have to use each letter only once.. two words can be made from these letters - at , sound
alme, lame, male, meal
The letters from the top row of the keyboard are Q W E R T Y U I O and P, so the word that can be formed using those letters (and repeating a couple) is typewriter.More Answer...From the letters on the top row of a keyboard you can also type PEPPERROOT, PEPPERWORT, PERPETUITY, PEWTERWORT, PIROUETTER, PREREQUIRE, PRETORTURE, PROPRIETOR, REPERTOIRE, REPETITORY, TETTERWORT. If you'd like a 12 letter word with a hyphen, then TEETER-TOTTER.
that is common as a pig sign at yahoo messanger, msn and pther chat websites that is shown... ★_★ ------------------------------------ ^--^ or (OO) "(-O_o- ) " < o (=) o >
24
The Dvorak keyboard is a typewriter keyboard layout designed to optimize (speed up) the ability of a typist to type. The original mechanical typewriters use levers and pivots to a character on a metal die at the end of a lever swing into position and hit a ribbon with ink, pressing it against paper where the shape of the letter would appear. There was a separate lever and die for each letter, number, and punctuation. More lever action was used to distinguish between upper case or lower case letter. Each lever had to swing up into the same position to make the letter. After typing the letter, it would fall back into its original resting position. If someone typed too fast, the next letter would hit the previous one on its way down causing a mechanical jam. To prevent jamming, typists were forced to slow down by designing a keyboard layout that made it difficult to switch between letters that would occur in sequence. This was the QWERTY keyboard we all learned to use and are still using. About 1936, with advancement in typewriter technology, Dr. August Dvorak (and company) designed a keyboard layout that optimized the ability of a typist. It is available for computers but not universally accepted.
tale, late, at, let, ale, eat, ate
You need a interface. This one is very cheap, it says USB on it, its a small green box. Its made by midiman....... Or you can try fruity loops....