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Definition of Touch system
1. Noun. Typewriting in which the fingers are trained to hit particular keys; typist can read and type at the same time.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Touch System
Literary usage of Touch system
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Electronic Services: Licensing, Permitting, and the State Lottery Network in by DIANE Publishing Company (1995)
"The Tulare touch system cost about $3.2 million to build, but enormous payoffs are
... The Tulare touch system uses IBM PS/2 computers and IBM's Info Window ..."
2. The Stenographer (1901)
"... referring especially to Mr. Prank E. McGurrin, as a noted Remington operator,
the first expert to use a touch system in writing on the machine; ..."
3. U.S. Navy Education Study Courses: Manual of Standard Practice and by United States Bureau of Naval Personnel (1922)
"The lessons are so graded that anyone can get the idea of the touch system.
For a more thorough study, the following rational typewriting course is ..."
4. The American Pageant Revisited: Recollections of a Stanford Historian by Thomas A. Bailey (1982)
"At Stanford I early invested a little time in a one-unit typing course and thus
learned the rudiments of the touch system. This was one of the wisest moves ..."
5. Hygiene of the Eye by William Campbell Posey (1918)
"The blind operator is entirely at home with the " touch system " now generally
taught in schools of business ; for no other system is possible for him. ..."