Bombhead is a sticky piston
Depends what kind of crackers- there are many sizes
This depends on what kind of crackers you are referring to, as well as on how the crackers are crushed (i.e. coarse versus fine crumbs).
they were kind of the shape of oysters
artificel chedder.
Saltines
Graham - as in graham cracker.
Oyster crackers are small crackers often served with soups and chowders.
Well...my opinion is that you shouldn't...Some foods are painless to us but harmful and poisonous to dogs. For example, chocolate is poisonous to dogs because it has a type of alchohol in it. (no, it is not the "beer and wine" kind of alchohol and its not the medical type either)So if you plan on feeding your dog (well, if you have one) prawn crackers, then I say it might be a bad idea. And I said might.
crackers, cheese, grapes, etc...
I'm assuming that you're using a European recipe where, what we call cookies are called biscuits. The cheesecake batter is usually poured over a crumb crust of crushed cookies or graham crackers before baking. The cookies (biscuits) can be any kind that you like yourself. The most commonly used is the graham crackers, but many people find that boring and use their own favorite. That could be vanilla wafers, ginger snaps, chocolate wafers, or even chocolate chip cookies.
It really depends on the kind of cracker, brand, and how big they are. Usually anywhere from about 5 to 10 crackers is one serving, though.
Suppose two classes are going on a field trip to the zoo. There are 28 people in one class and 22 people in the other class. The teachers want to order lunch for all of the students, and in each lunch, they want there to be 2 packages of crackers. How many packages of crackers should the teachers order? Well, here is where order of operations comes in: The teachers want to order 2*(28+22) packages of graham crackers. If the teachers didn't use order of operations, then instead of ending up with 100 packages of graham crackers, the teachers would end up with 78 packages of graham crackers, and some of the kids would be very unhappy. The above example demonstrates one kind of "order of operations." Here is another example which uses what perhaps you really mean when you say "order of operations." Suppose on that same bus trip each teacher also wants one package of crackers. Then, the teachers write this down mathematically as: 2 + 2*(28+22) = 2 + 2*(50) Using correct "order of operations" the teachers will figure out that they should order 102 packages of crackers. If instead the teachers were to not use "order of operations," they would order 200 crackers, and that would just be too much.