Denoting a standard layout of keys on a keyboard for typing, in which the leftmost keys of the top row are Q-W-E-R-T-Y
It was the Monotype model D keyboard introduced in 1907 which became the standard for printers, with a “qwerty” typewriter lay and removable keybars which made the keyboard independent of the matrix case arrangement.
A QWERTY keyboard on a typewriter or computer is the standard English language keyboard, on which the top line of keys begins with the letters q, w, e, r, t, and y. a qwerty keyboard on a computer or typewriter has the keys arranged in the usual way for English-speaking countries, with Q,W,E,R,T, and Y on the top row
An abbreviation used to indicate a standard typewriter-style keyboard The first six letters in the third row of a standard keyboard are qwerty
(Keyboard) - Refers to the first six letters of the modern, standard keyboard's layout Underneath the row of numbers, these six letters in succession begin the letter sequence
Describing a standard keyboard layout in which the alphabet is arranged in the order QWERTYUIOP on the top row, ASDFGHJKL on the middle row, and ZXCVBNM on the bottom row
{s} having the standard key arrangement of a computer keyboard or typewriter; of or relating to the standard key arrangement of a computer keyboard or typewriter
One of the puppets in the parody of "Punch and Judy" in the background of one of the episodes RB: 1 R
The standard english-language keyboard layout Term comes from the first six letters below the row of numbers See also: DVORAK
keyboard - The standard typewriter or computer keyboard, with the characters "Q, W, E, R, T, and Y" on the top row of letters The QWERTY keyboard was developed in the 1800's to slow-down swift typists and to prevent jamming of the old mechanical typewriters
A keyboard whose top row of letter keys starts with the letters Q, W, E, R, T, Y
The keyboard layout (qv) used in America and the United Kingdom in which the arrangement of letters on the first row of alphabetical characters is QWERTY
Name of the standard American-English keyboard The letters keys in the top row from left to right are "Q-W-E-R-T-Y," hence the name
/kwer'tee/ adj [from the keycaps at the upper left] Pertaining to a standard English-language typewriter keyboard (sometimes called the Sholes keyboard after its inventor), as opposed to Dvorak or non-US-ASCII layouts or a space-cadet keyboard or APL keyboard
The tendency to continue to use the first available product or system despite the fact that recent advances, technology and/or ideas could provide better alternatives
Keyboard arrangement, containing in the second row (row D) from left to right the letters Q, W, E, R, T, Y, U, I, O, P This keyboard dominates in cultures using the Latin alphabet (with exception of the French culture) The Estonian keyboard presented in this standard is a modification of the QWERTY keyboard The AZERTY keyboard is used in French cultural environment, the QWERTZ keyboard has been in use in the German culture