Keyboard office machine (10) |
|
|
Device, kind used by hack? (10) |
|
|
Device, kind used by hack? |
The Telegraph Cryptic |
01 Mar 2024 |
Machine for producing letters (10) |
|
|
Old-fashioned technology with keys that was once used by authors |
|
|
Keyboard for Snoopy |
USA Today |
11 Feb 2022 |
Kind women taking holy orders, for example, introducing reform essential to the old office |
Irish Times Crosaire |
19 Jan 2022 |
Printer's extremely testy stare maintaining order |
The Times Cryptic |
30 Dec 2021 |
Model auditor's more accurate report-writing mechanism? |
|
|
… wire broken in old office equipment |
|
|
Family with women taking holy orders, for example, introducing reform essential to the old office |
Irish Times Crosaire |
12 Aug 2019 |
Class is responsible for volume typical of secretarial college |
Irish Times Crosaire |
12 Jun 2019 |
Once-popular keyboard device |
Newsday |
25 Feb 2019 |
Carriage returns here for kind author |
|
|
Race bookmaker is capable of handling all types from a particular carriage |
Irish Times Crosaire |
17 Jan 2018 |
Mark Twain, say, used this? |
The Telegraph Cryptic |
22 Aug 2017 |
Kind author that has characters making an impression |
The Telegraph Cryptic |
22 Nov 2016 |
It may have been used by Mark Twain? |
|
|
Broken wire in pretty awful office equipment |
The Telegraph Cryptic |
17 Apr 2016 |
Printer using extremes of technology with metal to impress Royal Institution |
The Telegraph Toughie |
16 Mar 2016 |
Member of Set 2 |
Wall Street Journal |
14 Oct 2015 |
1868 patent for authors |
USA Today |
25 Aug 2015 |
Apt example of this puzzle's theme |
New York Times |
15 Jul 2015 |
Class novelist has all the keys |
Irish Times Crosaire |
14 Jul 2015 |
Member of Set 2 |
|
|
1868 patent for authors |
|
|
Apt example of this puzzle's theme |
|
|
"Puts the keys of the future at your fingertips" (Philadelphia, 1876) |
|
|
Hand-operated character printer |
|
|
Where the ends of 17-, 23-, and 47-Across are found |
|
|
Victim of 26-Across |
|
|
With 49-Across, where 17-, 24- and 39-Across are seen |
|
|
See 18-Across |
|
|
Royal, e.g. |
|
|
Royal, e.g. |
|
|
Obsolete office machine |
|
|
Start of a headline |
|
|
Place to find keys |
|
|
Christopher Sholes' brainchild |
|
|
End of the explanation |
|
|
"The ___," Leroy Anderson hit |
|
|
Soulé's 1868 invention |
|
|
Machine in use since the 1860's |
|
|
Henry Mill's invention: 1714 |
|
|
Office machine. |
|
|
The answers at 17- and 52-Across and 11- and 27-Down are the longest words using only the letters in the top row of this! |
|
|