A horse.
An animal that has large cuspids and incisors is a carnivore, meaning its diet consists primarily of meat. Carnivores typically have sharp, large canines as well.
If by fangs you mean the large pointed canine teeth, between the incisors and premolars of a mammal, they are used to spear and grip flesh.
Inscisor,Canines,Molars,and sometimes wisdom teeth
Cows have a total of 32 teeth: six molars (strong grinding teeth) each side on top and bottom, plus eight incisors on the bottom front. On the top front they have a pad of tough skin.
+Incisors, Canines, Premolars, and Molars:+ +Incisors are for cutting and ingesting food, they are the front teeth.+ +Canines are for puncturing food (or dealing the deathblow on an animal if the canines belong a carnivore), they are that sharp pointy teeth that come after the incisors.+ +Premolars and Molars are used for processing the food and getting it ready to be digested in the stomach. Premolars are smaller than molars and have fewer bumps on them. These teeth types are different among different animals because the diets may be different and the teeth need to be able to digest the food the animal eats.
A dolphin is an animal!!
The sharp fangs in an animal's mouth are all called canine teeth. The names of the teeth are incisors for cutting and snipping, canines for ripping and puncturing, premolars and molars for grinding and crushing. Felines and humans both have canine teeth. It would be too confusing to call them feline teeth in a cat and homo teeth in a human, so we call them all the name we first thought of by studying dogs - canine.
The little teeth at the front of a cat's mouth are called Incisors, just like a human's front teeth.
A cheetah is an extremely fast animal and has big canines and spotted skin.
Rabbits are a type of animal that has sets of both molars and premolars. However, rabbits have no sets of canine teeth.
Rats, humans, beavers.
Rodent