Bread
teezaa ;P
Input is bread.Process is heat.Output is toast.
By the nature of the fact that it is a bread, it can be sliced and placed in a slot toaster, or simply shortened (if necessary) to fit into a toaster-oven to be toasted. In essance, any bread that can be cut into the required shape can be put into a toaster given that it fits the input shape or size of that toaster.
It is not a machine, which by definition must transmit work and motion. The toaster does neither of these. Also machines will have some value of mechanical advantage, which is simply the ratio of force output over force input. There is no mechanical advantage from a toaster.
There are no volts in a toaster. Depending on your country of residence, your toaster may use 110v or 220v. Here's an easy way to tell.If you are in Canada or the US, your toaster is the 110 variety.If you are in Europe, Asia, the Middle East, and a few other countries, your toaster is the 220 variety.
Toaster(normal) and toaster oven.There's also a microwave toaster....
I forgot to plug in the toaster when I went to make toast.
Blueberry toaster strudels
ang bread toaster ay isang bread na toaster
If we're not talking about a toaster than has extra-wide slots, the answer is yes. When trying to pry a bagel out of a traditional toaster, the toaster usually wins. A toaster oven eliminates this daily tug-of-war.
Magic. The toaster eats it. Bad toaster.
the brave little toaster