Correct answer: method or methods
"Touch typing" means to use a typewriter keyboard (or today, computer keyboard) without looking at the keys. The typist has a "touch" or "feel" for where all the keys are and can type more quickly by not needing visual confirmation of the keys they are striking as they type. I'm touch typing as I write this answer by the way -- I had a very good (and very fussy) keyboard instructor back in high school who drilled us over and over again in learning our keystrokes.
The practice of touch typing is sometimes credited to Frank Edward McGurrin, who was a court stenographer in Salt Lake City, Utah, and also taught typing classes. He won a typing contest held in Cincinnati in 1888 using his method. He developed his method while serving as a law office clerk in Grand Rapids, Michigan. He said of those early days of his career: "Before the end of the year 1878 I could write upwards of 90 words a minute in new matter without looking at the keyboard."
If the education a specific individual is given is poor, then they won't understand their freedoms. (For example, some slaves were kept even after the Civil War because they were lied to and told they weren't free.)
I hope this answer helped you! If you have any further questions or concerns, feel free to ask! :)
Answer:
Mexico forms the southern border of the United States .
Explanation:
Hope this helped.
Explanation:
Both want a change from being ruled by an absolute ruler, both have economic instability from war debt, both have social inequality. And also, both started because of enlightenment ideas. What was the major difference between the American and French Revolutions? The American revolution didn't have the reign of terror.
to gain representation in government. to reduce inequality between the classes. to increase taxation for most citizens. to gain independence from Britain.
Both revolutions were focused on the countries gaining freedom and independence, mainly looking at the concepts of liberty and equality. America wanted to escape from the regulations and rules that the British were putting on them, whereas the French simply wanted to abolish the monarchy in their own country.