The first printing presses did not use electricity.
I believe James Franklin was his brother... Benjamin was also his brother's apprentice in a printing press for a while until he ran away because James was said to have been jealous of Ben's fame for his once anonymous "Mrs. Silence Dogood" articles in his brother's newspaper.
Busevsheef, he was the best known.Hindenburg and Ludendorf were the Generals who ran the German war machine.
Born and raised in Boston, Franklin worked as an apprentice in his brother's printing business to learn the trade. After working for him for five years, he became fed up with his strict brother, and in 1723, at the age of 17, he moved to Philadelphia where he again worked in the printing trade.
Neither is correct.I should be I ran but I have run.
they became fearful and ran away
"Read All About It"
They ran a printing shop and a bicycle repair shop.
electricity ran machines such as fans and printing presses, soon it became available in homes, it helped cities to built electric streetcars and made travel esaier and cheaper
If press is part of a proper noun, then yes.The Gazette Press publishes a daily newspaper.Mr. Press ran a printing store.If not part of a proper noun, then no.Please press my shirt.I had to press the doorbell ten times before the man answered the door.
A fuel ran machine uses combustion to obtain power, which therefore creates noise, an electrical machine uses the magnetic fields of electricity to obtain power which in return is silent, and there is the reason for the difference.
hovered and ran on electricity
Electricity; he invented the lightning rod. Metals; he developed a more efficient stove. Printing; he ran a printing shop for many years. Oceanography; Franklin was the first person to map the Gulf Stream. Astronomy; his almanac was superb. Timekeeping; his description of the cycle of leap years was outstanding. Benjamin Franklin was a "polymath"; he was a genius, and studied everything around him.
more people could read about important civic events.
Cars run on fossil fuels, gasoline, vegetable oil, and electricity.
No, but you can press your fist into his/her face and tell people that the kid ran into it
They are not. They're run by current electricity, that comes from the power company and through the meter outside your house.
Yes ... but it makes a mess as chocolate is a lousy conductor.