A plant or vegetable produced by impregnating the pistil of one species with the pollen or fecundating dust of another; called also hybrid
A coin, token or medal with obverse and reverse sides which are not normally matched by the issuing authority Mules are normally the result of a mistake in the coining process when one half of a die pair is accidentally used with another half of a different die pair
MULE refers to the Emacs features for editing non-ASCII text using multibyte characters (q v ) Chapitre 20
Using a specialized character within a certain area to help out one of your other characters One example is to use IP-points on specialising in making implants, and giving this to another character that is specialised in fighting
A hybrid animal; specifically, one generated between an ass and a mare, sometimes a horse and a she-ass
Once upon a time, someone decided the check numbers on small size currency were too small to read (my aging eyes would tend to agree) Back in those bad old days, the check numbers were printed in a font 0 6mm tall A decision was made in 1938 to change the digits to something a little larger (1mm) This was actually cause for a change in the series designation, as it constituted a change in the face design of the note Of course, the face and reverse aren't printed on the same day (or week, or possibly month or year), so it was inevitable that some notes would be printed with one size check number on one side, and the other size on the other These notes are called "mules" by collectors