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English Typing Guide

Learn English Typing

Complete beginner's guide to English typing — QWERTY layout, home row, finger zones, and tips to reach 35+ WPM for SSC CHSL and RRB NTPC.

QWERTY layoutHome row techniqueSSC CHSL prep

English QWERTY — 20 Lessons

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English typing for government exams

Exams like SSC CHSL and RRB NTPC require English typing at 35 WPM (SSC) or 30 WPM (RRB). The standard layout is QWERTY — the same keyboard your PC already uses. No special font installation needed.

The QWERTY Home Row

Left hand rests on A-S-D-F. Right hand rests on J-K-L-;. Thumbs on the Space bar. Feel the small bumps on F and J — these are your anchor keys. Every keystroke begins and ends here.

A

Left Pinky

S

Left Ring

D

Left Middle

F

Left Indexbump

G

Left Index

H

Right Index

J

Right Indexbump

K

Right Middle

L

Right Ring

;

Right Pinky

Dark keys (F, J) have tactile bumps — anchor keys for home row position

How to learn English touch typing

1

Familiarise yourself with QWERTY

Learn where all 26 letters, numbers, and punctuation keys are. Use a printed layout chart for reference during your first week — don't try to memorize everything at once.

2

Master the home row position

Place left fingers on A-S-D-F and right fingers on J-K-L-;. Feel for the bumps on F and J. After every word, consciously return to this position until it becomes automatic.

3

Learn finger zone assignments

Left index covers F, G, R, T, V, B. Right index covers J, H, U, Y, N, M. Middle fingers reach one key up or down. Pinkies handle the outer columns. Never reach across zones.

4

Type without looking at the keyboard

Cover your hands with a sheet of paper. Start at 15 WPM with zero errors. If you feel the urge to look down, stop and reset. Looking even once breaks the muscle memory loop.

5

Practice with exam-style passages

After 2 weeks, switch to SSC CHSL-style English passages. Real sentences at exam difficulty are far more effective than random letter drills for building exam speed.

Tips to improve your speed

  • Accuracy first — hit 98%+ accuracy at slow speed before chasing WPM. Every error costs 2–3 keystrokes to fix, which kills net speed.

  • Never look down at the keyboard. Even one glance resets the muscle memory you spent hours building.

  • Drill weak keys — most people have 3–5 keys they consistently miss. Identify them from error reports and drill specifically.

  • Type in word chunks, not letter by letter. Experienced typists process common bigrams (TH, IN, ER) as single movements.

  • 20 minutes daily beats 3 hours on weekends. Spaced, consistent practice builds durable muscle memory.

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Free online English typing test — virtual keyboard, finger guide, and real-time WPM tracking.

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