A dongle was a thing like this (and it's a true story):
You buy a truly enormous and expensive machine for your laboratory; it comes with software to control it, and a dongle to stick in the back of the PC. There is nothing the software can do except control this machine, and every machine is sold with a copy of the software.
A year later there is a thunderstorm and a power-surge kills the dongle (amazingly without killing either the expensive machine or the PC). Now you can't use the machine. You have to get a new dongle.
Since it's on a service contract (hopefully!) the manufacturer has to send an engineer 200km to replace the dongle.
Two weeks later there's another thunderstorm.
Dongles were a complete pain, and in some cases downright harmful to the company that used them (didn't they realise that a vast and expensive piece of machinery is itself a very effective dongle? What did they think I was going to do with their software? Modify it to control my fridge?)
Thank Goodness Dongles seem to be history, at least in my field. And yes, they often plugged into the parallel port, and in theory you could daisy-chain several, and stick the printer in the end, but it takes little imagination to see what the back of a PC looks like with 3 dongles and a printer, and less imagination to see what happens when you move the PC fractionally.
Unfortunately it took more imagination than was available to the inventor of the dongle.