Children have 20 teeth. They don’t have premolar teeth.
Adults have 32 teeth.
Some adults have extra teeth called Mesiodense and paramolars, that are very rare.
Teeth formation starts even before you are born - milk teeth or baby teeth start to form within the gums when the baby is in the womb, but they come through when the child is between 6-12 months old.
Humans use four different kinds of teeth (incisors, canines, premolars and molars) to cut, tear and grind their food.
Your mouth produces over 25,000 quartz of saliva in a lifetime that’s enough to fill two swimming pools.
Some animals grow new teeth just once in their lives.
Reptiles, such as snakes and crocodiles may have several set of teeth …show more content…
If you don’t get it filled in a timely manner it reaches to the pulp and the tooth becomes infected and can cause pain.
If you get your tooth knocked out, put it in milk and hold it in your mouth from where it popped out this will help your tooth to survive longer (except when little one’s lose their milk teeth). Make sure you see the dentist right away.
Elephants have up to six sets of teeth in their life time.
When a horse is angry, it pulls back its ears and curls its lips to show its teeth
Sharks lose their teeth every week.
Basking shark and whale shark have very sharp teeth and usually eat big fish. The greater white shark is known to be a man eater.
A mouse’s front teeth never stops growing, when a mouse gnaws on something, its bottom teeth push upwards and shave off a little bit at a time.
Squirrels big teeth help it to gnaw on nuts.
The rabbit’s big teeth help it nibble through grass.
Over the course of your life, you will spend about 38 days brushing your teeth.
A tooth that gets knocked out will start to die within 15