Определение (tooth) в Английский Язык Английский Язык словарь
- Charcot-Marie-Tooth
- Any of the Charcot-Marie-Tooth disorders
Charcot-Marie-Tooth type 1A.
- Charcot-Marie-Tooth
- Describes any of various genetic disorders whose primary symptom is peripheral neuropathy
Charcot-Marie-Tooth neuropathy.
- baby tooth
- a tooth which will be replaced as a child ages, as opposed to an adult permanent tooth; a milk tooth
- back tooth
- A molar
- canine tooth
- One of the pointed teeth behind the incisors and in front of the premolar teeth
- clean as a hound's tooth
- Very clean (very innocent)
- corner tooth
- One of the four teeth which come in a horse's mouth at the age of four years and a half, one on each side of the upper and of the lower jaw, between the middle teeth and the tushes
- deciduous tooth
- A baby tooth, a tooth that falls out as later teeth grow in; milk tooth
- egg tooth
- A small, sharp, cranial protuberance used by offspring to break or tear through the egg's surface during hatching
- eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth
- Compensation for injury caused by a person, in the form of inflicting of an identical injury on that person
- eye tooth
- A canine tooth (only of human teeth)
- fight tooth and nail
- To use every means possible to overcome a difficult opposition
The villagers fought tooth and nail to prevent the motorway being built through the local woodlands.
- fine-tooth comb
- To search meticulously
- fine-tooth comb
- A comb with fine, closely-spaced teeth
- fine-tooth comb
- To go over or through with a fine-tooth comb
- give an eye-tooth
- Alternative form of give one's eye-teeth
How his frownHath scatter'd them like leaves! they fly from himAs nimbly as their bodies had no more weightThan their petitions. I would give an eye-tooth,To read but three lines.
- hen's tooth
- anything not naturally occurring
As rare as a hen's tooth.
- long in the tooth
- Old, aged
So as Microsoft began its 30th year last month, investors wondered whether it's a little long in the tooth.
- milk tooth
- Any tooth of the first set of teeth of young people (or livestock.)
- milk-tooth
- Alternative spelling of milk tooth
- primary tooth
- milk tooth
- sabre-tooth
- A sabre-toothed tiger
- saw tooth
- Describing a function or waveform that consists of repeated triangular transitions when graphed
- saw tooth
- Shaped like a saw tooth
- saw tooth
- A cutting bit of a saw
- sweet tooth
- Someone with a liking for sweet foods
- sweet tooth
- a liking for foods that are sweet; a weakness for sweets
He eats a healthy diet most of the time, but has a sweet tooth when it comes to candy.
- temporary tooth
- milk tooth
- 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
- 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
- A sharp projection on the blade of a saw or similar implement
- tooth and nail
- Viciously; with all one’s strength or power; without holding back
For a century, the two families fought tooth and nail over control of the land.
- tooth fairies
- plural form of tooth fairy
- tooth fairy
- A figure of modern myth said to give children a small amount of money (or sometimes a present) in exchange for a tooth when it falls out of a child's mouth
- tooth shell
- Any of various molluscs, of the class Scaphopoda, that have curved, tapering shells and a spade-like foot
- tooth socket
- A socket in the jaw in which the roots of teeth are held in the alveolar process of maxilla with the periodontal ligament
- tooth-to-jowl
- Very close together
Having no safe, private sanitation facilities in areas where people are living tooth-to-jowl means going the whole day without relieving oneself and then risking exposure at night. - Millenium Project, ''Interim Report of Task Force 7 on Water and Sanitation, 2004-02-01.
- wisdom tooth
- One of the four (one upper and one lower on each side) rearmost molars in humans, which typically develop between ages 18-24
- wisdom-tooth
- Attributive form of wisdom tooth, noun
wisdom-tooth pain.
- sore tooth
- tooth that hurts
- gap tooth
- a space between the two front teeth on the upper row of teeth in a person's mouth
- sweet tooth
- love for sweet foods
- tooth
- {v} to indent, lock in each other, chew
- tooth
- {n} a small bone set in the mouth, a palate
- deciduous tooth
- (Diş) A temporary tooth of a young mammal especially : one of the human dentition including four incisors, two canines, and four molars in each jaw
- abscessed tooth
- an abscess of a common kind in the tissue around a tooth
- artificial tooth
- false tooth, dental implant resembling a real tooth made to fill the space of a missing tooth
- baby tooth
- baby teeth a tooth from the first set of teeth that young children have British Equivalent: milk tooth
- back tooth
- a tooth situated at the back of the mouth
- bleeding tooth
- gastropod having reddish toothlike projections around the shell opening; of the Caribbean area
- canine tooth
- The second tooth from the big front tooth, commonly called the eye tooth or cuspid
- canine tooth
- one of the four pointed conical teeth (two in each jaw) located between the incisors and the premolars
- carnassial tooth
- the last upper premolar and first lower molar teeth of a carnivore; having sharp edges for cutting flesh
- charcot-marie-tooth disease
- a form of neuropathy that can begin between childhood and young adulthood; characterized by weakness and atrophy of the muscles of the hands and lower legs; progression is slow and individuals affected can have a normal life span; inheritance is X-linkedrecessive or X-linked dominant
- crown a tooth
- put a dental crown on a tooth, put a protective covering on a tooth
- egg tooth
- A hard toothlike projection from the beak of embryonic birds, or from the upper jaw of embryonic reptiles, that is used to cut the egg membrane and shell upon hatching and that later falls off
- extracted a tooth
- pulled a tooth
- eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth
- person's punishment should be equal to the wrong or crime which he committed (Biblical)
- eye tooth
- canine: one of the four pointed conical teeth (two in each jaw) located between the incisors and the premolars
- eye tooth
- pointed tooth located in the upper jaw approximately under the eye
- fill a tooth
- put a filling in a tooth, fill up a cavity in a tooth (with silver, cement, etc.)
- fine-tooth comb
- comb whose teeth are placed closely together
- fine-tooth comb
- a method of examining in minute detail; "he went over the contract with a fine-tooth comb looking for loopholes"
- fine-tooth comb
- a comb with teeth set close together
- fine-tooth comb
- emphasis If you say that you will go over something with a fine-tooth comb or go through something with a fine-tooth comb, you are emphasizing that you will search it thoroughly or examine it very carefully. go through/over sth with a fine-tooth comb to examine something very carefully and thoroughly
- fore tooth
- One of the teeth in the forepart of the mouth; an incisor
- fought tooth and nail
- fought fiercely, fought with all his might
- front tooth
- a tooth situated at the front of the mouth; "his malocclusion was caused by malposed anteriors
- impacted tooth
- {i} (Dentistry) tooth which is in the interior part of the alveolus
- incisor tooth
- one of eight teeth at the front of the mouth that are specialized for cutting
- long in the tooth
- {i} (Slang) aged people; elderly; growing old
- malposed tooth
- a tooth that has grown in a faulty position
- milk tooth
- Your milk teeth are the first teeth that grow in your mouth, which later fall out and are replaced by a second set. Any of the temporary first teeth of a young mammal. Also called baby tooth, primary tooth. milk teeth one of the first set of teeth that babies and young children have = baby tooth
- molar tooth
- wide tooth on the side of the mouth whose job it is to break apart the food
- mouse-tooth forceps
- a type of forceps
- permanent tooth
- any of the 32 teeth that replace the deciduous teeth of early childhood and (with luck) can last until old age
- permanent tooth
- adult tooth that replaces a milk tooth
- permanent tooth
- One of the second set of teeth in mammals that grow as the milk teeth are shed. Humans have 32 permanent teeth
- primary tooth
- one of the first temporary teeth of a young mammal (one of 20 in children)
- pulling out a tooth
- removal of a tooth
- saw-tooth
- projection on a saw, nib on a saw blade
- stomach tooth
- A canine tooth of the lower jaw
- sweet tooth
- A fondness or craving for sweets
- sweet tooth
- a strong appetite for sweet food
- 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
- 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
- Those little "bumps" of oil on a fine quality Cameroon wrapper
- tooth and nail
- with force and ferocity; "she fought tooth and nail
- tooth and nail
- With every available resource; with unrelenting effort: "Bureaucrats would correctly see this as a curb on their power and would fight tooth and nail against it" (George R. Packard)
- tooth and nail
- in every way, by all means
- tooth brush
- small brush with a handle used to clean one's teeth
- tooth decay
- soft decayed area in a tooth; progressive decay can lead to the death of a tooth
- tooth decay
- If you have tooth decay, one or more of your teeth has become decayed
- tooth fairy
- a fairy that is said to leave money at night under a child's pillow to compensate for a baby tooth falling out
- tooth for a tooth
- punishment as severe as the injury
- tooth fungus
- a fungus of the family Hydnaceae
- tooth picks
- small sharp sticks to clean food remains from teeth
- tooth powder
- {i} tooth cleanser in the form of a powder
- tooth shell
- Any of various burrowing marine mollusks of the class Scaphopoda, having a long, tapering, slightly curved tubular shell. Also called scaphopod, tusk shell
- tooth socket
- indentation in the jaw that holds a tooth
- tooth socket
- a bony socket in the alveolar ridge that holds a tooth
- wisdom tooth
- grinding most internal tooth which grows during adolescence and usually has to be removed for the teeth to grow straight
- wisdom tooth
- any of the last 4 teeth on each side of the upper and lower jaw; the last of the permanent teeth to erupt (between ages 16 and 21)