Changeable? No

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Possible Answers: SET.

Last seen on: Universal Crossword – August 11 2018 Saturday

Random information on the term “Changeable? No”:

Changeables, also known as McRobots, was a toy series produced by the McDonald’s corp. and given away with fast-food meals at their restaurants. The series used the then-popular “Transforming Robots” toy concept in conjunction with their own products. The robots could transform into items (mostly food) from the company.There were three series (1987, 1989 and 1990) of McRobots.

The original series featured six food items that transformed into unnamed robots. The second series included re-colors of two Series 1 robots (Big Mac and Large Fries) and six new molds. Series 2 also gave the robots names. Series 3 had four molds from Series 2 and three from Series 1 but changed into dinosaurs instead of robots. It also had one new mold, the Happy Meal box.

Intended for use by small children, the Changeables line of toys was surprisingly sturdy as each figure was made from fairly thick plastic and typically contained only three moving parts. This made changing the individual figures from food item to robot/dinosaur and back fairly easy even for those within the intended age range.

Changeable? No on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “SET”:

In mathematics, a set is a collection of distinct objects, considered as an object in its own right. For example, the numbers 2, 4, and 6 are distinct objects when considered separately, but when they are considered collectively they form a single set of size three, written {2,4,6}. The concept of a set is one of the most fundamental in mathematics. Developed at the end of the 19th century, set theory is now a ubiquitous part of mathematics, and can be used as a foundation from which nearly all of mathematics can be derived. In mathematics education, elementary topics from set theory such as Venn diagrams are taught at a young age, while more advanced concepts are taught as part of a university degree.

The German word Menge, rendered as “set” in English, was coined by Bernard Bolzano in his work The Paradoxes of the Infinite.

A set is a well-defined collection of distinct objects. The objects that make up a set (also known as the set’s elements or members) can be anything: numbers, people, letters of the alphabet, other sets, and so on. Georg Cantor, one of the founders of set theory, gave the following definition of a set at the beginning of his Beiträge zur Begründung der transfiniten Mengenlehre:[1]

SET on Wikipedia