تعريف teeth في الإنجليزية الإنجليزية القاموس.
- plural form of tooth
- The ability to be enforced, or to be enforced to any useful effect
- {v} to breed or put in teeth
- {n} of tooth
- Narrow, round, spore-producing projections hanging from the bottom of the caps of certain mushrooms such as the hedgehog mushroom
- plural of tooth
- The protruding points along the outer edge of a perforated postage stamp when it has been removed from the pane
- {f} grow teeth (about an infant or child)
- the kind and number and arrangement of teeth (collectively) in a person or animal
- Teeth is the plural of tooth. Plural of tooth. the plural of tooth
- (INCIDENT SUSPECT)
- Horses have twelve molars and six incisors; males have an additional tooth located behind the incisors Permanent teeth are formed by six years of age; the high crowned teeth are the mark of a grazing animal, and continue to grow throughout the lifetime of a horse The age of a horse can be determined by the condition and number of teeth
- The size of the driven gear is measured in the teeth around the circumference of this sprocket Changing gears therefore requires to 'run more/less teeth', i e use a driven gear of different size
- pl
- dentition, characteristic arrangement of teeth in human or animal; real power, real strength and effectiveness
- Death of an infant when teething Children appear to have been more susceptible to infection during this time, although malnutrition from being fed watered milk has also been suggested as a cause
- To breed, or grow, teeth
- Canines: the cornerstone of the mouth, the fangs or the cuspid (upper and lower) Incisors, Lateral: the next teeth on either side of the central incisors (upper and lower) Incisors, Central: the two front teeth, the cutting teeth (upper and lower) Molars: the back teeth, the chewing teeth (upper and lower) Premolar: the middle teeth or the bicuspid (upper and lower) TMJ(TMD): temporomandibular joint(disorder), the place near the ear where the lower jaw "joins" the skull A defect of the disc or other parts are involved A clicking is most common U
- choppers
- chompers
- gnashers
- teeth extraction
- removal of teeth
- temporary teeth
- plural form of temporary tooth
- Teeth.
- toothypegs
I'm so glad you've found a life and work you can sink your toothypegs into with glee.
- arm to the teeth
- To equip thoroughly with weapons
The kids were armed to the teeth in preparation for the water-balloon fight.
- baby teeth
- plural form of baby tooth; teeth of a baby
- balls-to-the-teeth
- Preposterously violent
In case you’ve never played the first game, here’s a Dead to Rights: Recap: “Bang! Punch! Bang! Punch! Bang! Punch! Woof!” It’s the kind of over-the-top, balls-to-the-teeth action that I honestly can’t tell if it’s being deliberately camp or if it was written by a paranoid NRA member shaking off a debilitating addiction to horse tranquilisers.
- bare one's teeth
- To show one's aggression
- bare one's teeth
- Of an animal, to show one's teeth as a sign of aggression
- by the skin of one's teeth
- barely; closely; by a narrow margin; with nothing to spare
I passed the test by the skin of my teeth.
- canine teeth
- plural form of canine tooth
- cut one's teeth
- To begin; to gain early experience
He cut his teeth flying model airplanes as a child, so aeronautical engineering came naturally.
- deciduous teeth
- plural form of deciduous tooth
- egg teeth
- plural form of egg tooth
- eye teeth
- plural form of eye tooth
- false teeth
- a set of dentures
- give one's eye-teeth
- To sacrifice something valuable
Sandy Flash burst into a roaring laugh. “Him! Ah-ha! you think we go snacks, eh? Do I look like a fool? Barton'd give his eye-teeth to put the halter round my neck with his own hands! No, no, young man; I have ways and ways o' learnin' things that you nor him'll never guess.”.
- grit one's teeth
- To clench one's teeth together tightly because of pain or anger or frustration
- grit one's teeth
- To face up to a difficult or disagreeable situation, and deal with it
There's a storm coming, so I grit my teeth and start rowing with all my might.
- hell's teeth
- an exclamation of surprise or anger
- hen's teeth
- plural form of hen's tooth
- hen's teeth
- anything very rare or impossible to obtain is said to be like finding hen’s teeth
- hens' teeth
- Alternative form of hen's teeth
- lie through one's teeth
- To tell a gross or egregious untruth
When a politician claims he can lower taxes without cutting spending, he's lying through his teeth.
- make someone's teeth itch
- To bother or unsettle a person; to put someone on edge
The squeaking won’t do any harm, but if it makes your teeth itch, oil the hinge.
- milk teeth
- plural form of milk tooth
- my back teeth are floating
- I have a strong need to urinate
Where's the restroom? My back teeth are floating!.
- primary teeth
- plural form of primary tooth
- pull teeth
- To do something that is especially difficult or effortful
You will probably have to pull teeth to get a straight answer from a car salesman.
- pull teeth
- To remove teeth, usually because they are diseased or damaged
- pulled teeth
- Simple past tense and past participle of pull teeth
- pulling teeth
- Present participle of pull teeth
Getting information from him is like pulling teeth.
- pulls teeth
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of pull teeth
- sink one's teeth into
- To become involved in; particularly in an enthusiastic manner
He can't wait to sink his teeth into the new project.
- tooth
- A pointed projection from the margin of a leaf
- tooth
- A hard, calcareous structure present in the mouth of many vertebrate animals, generally used for eating
- weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth
- consternation, worry
- wisdom teeth
- plural form of wisdom tooth
- tooth
- {v} to indent, lock in each other, chew
- tooth
- {n} a small bone set in the mouth, a palate
- as scarce as hen's teeth
- (deyim) Rare, uncommon, not many of them
Country doctors are as scarce as hen's teeth.
- deciduous teeth
- (Tıp, İlaç) deciduous are the first set of teeth in the growth development of humans and many other mammals
- deciduous teeth
- (Tıp, İlaç) milk teeth, baby teeth, temporary teeth or primary teeth
- get one's teeth into
- (deyim) To have something real or solid to think about; go to work on seriously; struggle with
After dinner, John got his teeth into the algebra lesson. Frank chose a subject for his report that he could sink his teeth into.
- give one's eye teeth
- (deyim) Very much like to have or be a thing
- give one's eye teeth for something
- (deyim) Very much like to have or be a thing
- give one's eye teeth to do something
- (deyim) Very much like to have or be a thing
- like pulling teeth
- (deyim) Very difficult
Its like pulling teeth getting Max to talk about his girlfrined .
- my back teeth are floating
- (Argo) (Aus) I have to piss immediately! I need to pee! I have a strong need to urinate!
Where's the restroom? My back teeth are floating!.
- sink one's teeth into
- (deyim) To have something real or solid to think about; go to work on seriously; struggle with
Frank chose a subject for his report that he could sink his teeth into.
- The teeth
- ivories
- The teeth
- ivory
- armed to the teeth
- completely armed, carrying lots of weapons
- broke his teeth
- chipped a number of his teeth
- brushed teeth
- teeth that have been cleaned with a toothbrush
- brushing one's teeth
- cleaning one's teeth with a toothbrush
- buck teeth
- teeth that stick forward out of your mouth (Because they are like a rabbit's teeth)
- by the skin of one's teeth
- just barely, by a narrow margin
- clenched his teeth
- closed his teeth tightly in effort or rage
- deciduous teeth
- (Dentistry) primary teeth, baby teeth
- deciduous teeth
- baby teeth
- deciduous teeth
- The first teeth, known as baby or primary teeth, which are eventually replaced by permanent teeth
- deciduous teeth
- Baby or first teeth which fall out and are replaced by the permanent teeth, there are 10 in each jaw
- dragon's teeth
- rows of cone-shaped cement obstacles (against tanks); source of an argument, basis of a quarrel
- draw teeth
- extract teeth from someone
- escape by the skin of one's teeth
- barely got away, only just escaped
- escape with the skin of one's teeth
- barely got away, only just escaped
- escaped by the skin of his teeth
- got away in the nick of time, barely managed to run away
- eye teeth
- If you say that you would give your eye teeth for something, you mean that you want it very much and you would do anything to get it. She has the job most of us would give our eye teeth for
- false teeth
- a removable denture
- false teeth
- dentures, artificial teeth
- false teeth
- a set of artificial teeth worn by someone who has lost their natural teeth = dentures
- gnashed his teeth
- ground his teeth in anger
- gnashing one's teeth
- grinding one's teeth in anger
- grind one's teeth
- grate one's teeth together, gnash one's teeth
- grinding of teeth
- making a harsh sound by rubbing teeth together; anger
- ground his teeth
- gnashed his teeth in anger
- his teeth chattered
- his teeth rattled together (due to fear, cold, etc.)
- lost his teeth
- his teeth fell out of his mouth
- milk teeth
- first teeth, temporary teeth
- permanent teeth
- teeth that replace one's baby teeth
- pick one's teeth
- poke and remove material from the teeth
- put teeth into
- made valid, made enforceable
- rare as hen's teeth
- (Slang) extremely uncommon, very unusual
- set one's teeth
- grind one's teeth, refuse to listen
- set one's teeth on edge
- bother, annoy, harass
- set the teeth on edge
- bother, annoy, harass
- showed his teeth
- threatened, demonstrated force
- sow dragon's teeth
- incite an argument, start a dispute
- tooth
- The feel of a ground in terms of coarseness and porosity
- tooth
- emphasis If you say that someone is lying through their teeth, you are emphasizing that they are telling lies
- tooth
- In a dry paint film, a fine texture imparted either by a proportion of relatively coarse or abrasive pigment, or by the abrasives used in sanding; this texture improves the burnish properties and also provides a good base for the adhesion of a subsequent coat of paint
- tooth
- If you do something in the teeth of a difficulty or danger, you do it in spite of the difficulty or danger. I was battling my way along the promenade in the teeth of a force ten gale In the teeth of the longest recession since the 1930s, the company continues to perform well
- tooth
- To lock into each other
- tooth
- Greek, odont'; Latin, dent'; Sanskrit, dant'; Gothic, tunth'; Anglo-Saxon, tóth, plural, téth Golden tooth (See Golden ) Wolf's tooth (See Teeth ) In spite of his teeth (See Teeth )
- tooth
- {i} hard white piece of bone in the mouth used to chew or grind food, whitish bony structure in the mouth; cleat, prong; indentation, sharp protrusion on the blade of a saw; something destructive; liking of a particular flavor or type of food (E.g.: I have a sweet tooth and I eat too much chocolate")
- tooth
- An angular or prominence on any edge; as, a tooth on the scale of a fish, or on a leaf of a plant one of the appendages at the mouth of the capsule of a moss
- tooth
- Small bumps which texture the wrapper on a cigar TORCEDOR Title earned by the master cigar rollers TORPEDO A cigar with a closed head and a closed foot TUBO A cigar that is placed in a tube Most tubes are aluminum while some are glass
- tooth
- Any projection corresponding to the tooth of an animal, in shape, position, or office; as, the teeth, or cogs, of a cogwheel; a tooth, prong, or tine, of a fork; a tooth, or the teeth, of a rake, a saw, a file, a card
- tooth
- A projecting member resembling a tenon, but fitting into a mortise that is only sunk, not pierced through
- tooth
- to get the bit between your teeth: see bit to give one's eye teeth for something: see eye to gnash one's teeth: see gnash to grit your teeth: see grit a kick in the teeth: see kick by the skin of your teeth: see skin. Any of the hard structures in the mouth used for biting and chewing and in speech. Each consists of a crown above the gum and one or more roots below it, embedded in the jaw. Its inner pulp contains the blood and nerve supply for the bonelike dentin, covered in the crown by enamel, the hardest tissue in the body. Twenty primary (baby) teeth come in by age 2 1/2 and fall out between ages 5 and 13 to be replaced by 32 permanent teeth. The incisors, in front, are shaped mostly for biting, the pointed canines for tearing, and the premolars and molars for grinding food. The teeth are subject to caries (decay), caused by acid from bacteria in plaque, a yellowish film that builds up on teeth. Misalignment of teeth between the upper and lower jaws can grind down the teeth and cause problems in chewing. Elsewhere, it is a cosmetic problem. Both can be treated with braces. See also dentistry
- tooth
- Grain on the wrapper leaf, sun-grown leaf has more tooth than than shade grown
- tooth
- A very slight surface texture of paper preferred for dry media such as charcoal and pastel
- tooth
- One of the hard, bony appendages which are borne on the jaws, or on other bones in the walls of the mouth or pharynx of most vertebrates, and which usually aid in the prehension and mastication of food
- tooth
- If you fight tooth and nail to do something, you do everything you can in order to achieve it. If you fight something tooth and nail, you do everything you can in order to prevent it. He fought tooth and nail to keep his job
- tooth
- Any hard calcareous or chitinous organ found in the mouth of various invertebrates and used in feeding or procuring food; as, the teeth of a mollusk or a starfish
- tooth
- If you say that something such as an official group or a law has teeth, you mean that it has power and is able to be effective. The opposition argues that the new council will be unconstitutional and without teeth The law must have teeth, and it must be enforced. see also wisdom tooth
- tooth
- a means of enforcement; "the treaty had no teeth in it"
- tooth
- If you have a sweet tooth, you like sweet food very much
- tooth
- Taste; palate
- tooth
- A sharp projection on the blade of a saw or similar implement
- tooth
- If you say that something sets your teeth on edge, you mean that you find it extremely unpleasant or irritating. Their voices set your teeth on edge
- tooth
- Tooth is the surface texture of a support or ground, which helps paint to adhere
- tooth
- one of a number of uniform projections on a gear
- tooth
- If you say that someone cut their teeth doing a particular thing, at a particular time, or in a particular place, you mean that that is how, when, or where they began their career and learned some of their skills. director John Glen, who cut his teeth on Bond movies
- tooth
- toothlike structure in invertebrates found in the mouth or alimentary canal or on a shell
- tooth
- A slightly rough paper surface which is readily ink receptive to top
- tooth
- approval If you describe a task or activity as something you can get your teeth into, you mean that you like it because it is interesting, complex, and makes you think hard. This role gave her something to get her teeth into
- tooth
- something resembling the tooth of an animal
- tooth
- The teeth of something such as a comb, saw, cog, or zip are the parts that stick out in a row on its edge
- tooth
- A bony structure projecting from the maxilla or mandible that provides for the grinding, or mechanical digestion, of food particles
- tooth
- To indent; to jag; as, to tooth a saw
- tooth
- To furnish with teeth
- tooth
- Greek, odont'; Latin, dent'; Sanskrit, dant'; Gothic, tunth'; Anglo-Saxon, t th, plural, téth Golden tooth (See Golden ) Wolf's tooth (See Teeth ) In spite of his teeth (See Teeth )
- tooth
- One of several steps, or offsets, in a tusk
- tooth
- disapproval If you describe someone as long in the tooth, you are saying unkindly or humorously that they are old or getting old. Aren't I a bit long in the tooth to start being an undergraduate?
- tooth
- A projection on the edge of a gear that meshes with similar projections on adjacent gears, or on the circumference of a cog that engages with a chain
- tooth
- Those little "bumps" of oil on a fine quality Cameroon wrapper
- tooth
- toothlike structure in invertebrates found in the mouth or alimentary canal or on a shell something resembling the tooth of an animal one of a number of uniform projections on a gear hard bonelike structures in the jaws of vertebrates; used for biting and chewing or for attack and defense
- tooth
- paper term
- tooth
- The profile, mechanical anchor pattern or surface roughness
- tooth
- The rough surfaced finish of papers such as vellum or antique
- tooth
- {f} equip with teeth e.g. tools; make a jagged edge on; mesh, interweave, interlock; become interlocked
- tooth
- a means of enforcement; "the treaty had no teeth in it" toothlike structure in invertebrates found in the mouth or alimentary canal or on a shell something resembling the tooth of an animal one of a number of uniform projections on a gear hard bonelike structures in the jaws of vertebrates; used for biting and chewing or for attack and defense
- tooth
- See Tooth, n
- tooth
- hard bonelike structures in the jaws of vertebrates; used for biting and chewing or for attack and defense
- tooth
- Your teeth are the hard white objects in your mouth, which you use for biting and chewing. If a tooth feels very loose, your dentist may recommend that it's taken out
- tooth
- Fig