The purpose of the typewriter was to increase efficiency, first in the commercial setting then branching out to the public. Ironically, it's successor, the computer, allowed for quick and easy editing of grammatical mistakes which you failed to take advantage of in your question.
a typewriter was an old fashioned way of typing stuff like letters
Christopher Latham Sholes, a newspaper editor, developed the typewriter, with the help of Samuel Soule and Carlos Glidden, in the 1860s. The purpose of the typewriter was to create a faster and more efficient way of transcribing text than writing by hand. Burridge and Marshman were not directly involved in the invention of the typewriter.
To enable people to write clearly - some people's handwriting is terrible, mine included!
A manual typewriter is the typewriter that was used before the Electric Typewriter was invented.
Babbage did not invent the typewriter - he invented the Difference Engine and the Analytical Engine: mechanical mathematical processors. His purpose in designing those was to simplify and improve the accuracy of complex, repetitive arithmetic operations.
Yes, I have a typewriter.
A manual typewriter is the typewriter that was used before the Electric Typewriter was invented.
on the typewriter
THE TYPEWRITER WAS mass marketed in 1779
what typewriter was invented in the 1940?
You can't get a free Chicago typewriter but if you want a Chicago typewriter you can finished the game and buy the Chicago typewriter for 1,000,000 pesetas.
No, Burridge and Marshman did not invent the typewriter. The typewriter was invented by Christopher Latham Sholes in the 1860s. Burridge and Marshman were not associated with the invention of the typewriter.