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Apostrophe On | French Keyboard

apostrophe on french keyboard

Apostrophe On | French Keyboard

Several proposals have been made to simplify the placement of the apostrophe on French keyboards:

Note for QWERTY Users: If you are used to a US/UK keyboard where the apostrophe sits next to the Enter key, this is the biggest adjustment. The key next to Enter on a French keyboard is usually the asterisk (*) or the micro (µ) key. apostrophe on french keyboard

If you have ever switched from a standard QWERTY keyboard to a French AZERTY layout, you know the immediate wave of confusion. Letters have swapped places, numbers require the Shift key, and simple punctuation seems to have vanished into thin air. Several proposals have been made to simplify the

Press Shift + , (comma). This is a common point of confusion for those used to the standard US layout where the apostrophe is next to the Enter key. 3. Using a US-International Keyboard Letters have swapped places, numbers require the Shift

The placement of the apostrophe on the French keyboard dates back to the early days of typewriters. In the 1870s, French typewriter manufacturers, such as Remington and Underwood, began producing machines with a layout that prioritized French language usage. The apostrophe was considered a secondary punctuation mark, and its placement on the exclamation mark key was seen as a way to optimize the keyboard layout for French typists.

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