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2. You enter and edit data in a query datasheet in the same way you do in a table datasheet.
a. True
b. False
ANSWER: True
POINTS: 1
REFERENCES: Access 28
Use the Query Wizard
QUESTION TYPE: True / False
HAS VARIABLES: False
LEARNING OBJECTIVES: ENHA.FRIE.16.022 - Describe the purpose for a query
DATE CREATED: 2/26/2016 8:14 PM
DATE MODIFIED: 4/14/2016 12:43 PM
3. In Access, the Save As command allows you to save either the entire database or the current object with a new name.
a. True
b. False
ANSWER: True
POINTS: 1
REFERENCES: Access 32
Use Query Design View
QUESTION TYPE: True / False
HAS VARIABLES: False
DATE CREATED: 4/10/2016 9:18 AM
DATE MODIFIED: 4/10/2016 9:20 AM
5. To delete records from a query datasheet, click the record selector button to the left of the record, click the Home tab,
click the Delete button in the Records group, and click Yes.
a. True
b. False
ANSWER: True
POINTS: 1
REFERENCES: Access 30
Work with Data in a Query
QUESTION TYPE: True / False
HAS VARIABLES: False
LEARNING OBJECTIVES: ENHA.FRIE.16.023 - Delete records in a query
DATE CREATED: 2/26/2016 8:14 PM
DATE MODIFIED: 4/10/2016 8:52 AM
6. To add, delete, or change fields in a query, you use Query Design View.
a. True
b. False
ANSWER: True
POINTS: 1
REFERENCES: Access 32
Use Query Design View
QUESTION TYPE: True / False
HAS VARIABLES: False
LEARNING OBJECTIVES: ENHA.FRIE.16.024 - Work in Query Design View
DATE CREATED: 2/26/2016 8:14 PM
DATE MODIFIED: 2/26/2016 8:14 PM
7. Deleting a field from a query also deletes it from the underlying table.
a. True
b. False
ANSWER: False
POINTS: 1
REFERENCES: Access 34
Sort and Find Data
QUESTION TYPE: True / False
8. The asterisk (*) is the wildcard used to represent one and only one character in criteria.
a. True
b. False
ANSWER: False
POINTS: 1
REFERENCES: Access 36
Filter Data
QUESTION TYPE: True / False
HAS VARIABLES: False
LEARNING OBJECTIVES: ENHA.FRIE.16.026 - Use wildcards in criteria
DATE CREATED: 2/26/2016 8:14 PM
DATE MODIFIED: 2/26/2016 8:14 PM
9. The question mark (?) is the wildcard character which stands for any single character in criteria.
a. True
b. False
ANSWER: True
POINTS: 1
REFERENCES: Access 36
Filter Data
QUESTION TYPE: True / False
HAS VARIABLES: False
LEARNING OBJECTIVES: ENHA.FRIE.16.026 - Use wildcards in criteria
DATE CREATED: 2/26/2016 8:14 PM
DATE MODIFIED: 2/26/2016 8:14 PM
10. The easiest way to filter the records for an exact match is to use the Filter By Form feature.
a. True
b. False
ANSWER: False
POINTS: 1
REFERENCES: Access 36
Filter Data
QUESTION TYPE: True / False
HAS VARIABLES: False
LEARNING OBJECTIVES: ENHA.FRIE.16.027 - Apply and remove filters in a query
DATE CREATED: 2/26/2016 8:14 PM
DATE MODIFIED: 2/26/2016 8:14 PM
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CHAPTER XI.
A REVOLUTIONARY HOUSEWIFE.
The settlers builded great chimneys with ample open hearths, and
to those hearths the vast forests supplied plentiful fuel; but as the
forests disappeared in the vicinity of the towns, the fireplaces also
shrank in size, so that in Franklin’s day he could write of the big
chimneys as “the fireplaces of our fathers;” and his inventions for
economizing fuel had begun to be regarded as necessities.
The kitchen was the housewife’s domain, the chimney-seat her
throne; but the furniture of that throne and the sceptre were far
different from the kitchen furnishings of to-day.
We often see fireplaces with hanging cranes in pictures illustrating
earliest colonial times, but the crane was unknown in those days.
When the seventeenth-century chimney was built, ledges were left
on either side, and on them rested the ends of a long heavy pole of
green wood, called a lug-pole or back bar. The derivation of the word
lug-pole is often given as meaning from lug to lug, as the chimney-
side was often called the lug. Whittier wrote:—
And for him who sat by the chimney lug.
Others give it from the old English word lug, to carry; for it was
indeed the carrying-pole. It was placed high up in the yawning
chimney, with the thought and intent of its being out of reach of the
devouring flames, and from it hung a motley collection of hooks of
various lengths and weights, sometimes with long rods, sometimes
with chains, and rejoicing in various names. Pot-hooks, pot-hangers,
pot-hangles, pot-claws, pot-cleps, were one and the same; so also
were trammels and crooks. Gib and gibcroke were other titles. Hake
was of course the old English for hook:—
Niddy-noddy,
Two heads and one body.