Between 2-2.5 years. It can be even more variable than that.
no babies do not have teeth when they are first born they form after a few months
Babies can't be born with teeth. We don't really know why, but it is simply so. babies start to grow them at the age of 1-2.
They can have it at any age. Babies, toddlers, whatever.
milk teeth
Babies can be born with teeth.
the milk teeth starts exfoliating from 6-7 years of age
The oldest age recorded for a person to still have milk teeth is around mid-20s. After this age, it is uncommon for individuals to retain milk teeth as they are gradually replaced by permanent teeth during childhood and adolescence.
Newborn babies typically have no teeth because they don't need them. Babies' first nutrition comes from mother's milk or a substitute. Most babies don't have teeth until 6 months to one year of age. By then, they are able to avoid dangers associated with eating solid food (ie., choking, gagging, aspirating, etc.). In fact, if babies were born with teeth, it would be bad for their nursing. Just ask any mother who has been bitten by their baby while nursing
It depends on your current location, availability of certain places, enthusiasm to feed babies, the method of feeding, the condition of the human babies, your mode of transportation, the weather at the time, the location of the human babies you desire to feed, how many people are currently feeding babies at the place you desire to feed human babies at, the condition and type of the milk you desire to feed to the human babies, the method of feeding, the allowance of the parents/guardian, your trustworthiness based on past experiences feeding human babies milk, the impact the baby has on you, the location that you plan to feed the human babies milk, the age of the human babies you desire to feed milk to, the current and planned eating habits of the human babies you desire to feed milk to, the impact you have on the human babies that you desire to feed milk to, the impact the location you plan to feed human babies milk to has on the human babies, the time you plan to feed milk to human babies, and so on.
It would depend on both the age of the baby and the type of pie. Generally, "babies" should not be fed pie but "toddlers" should have a full set of primary teeth (10 upper teeth and 10 lower teeth) by the age of 3 years. Caution should still be used with regard to any choking risk due to the crust of the pie and the size of the filling components, if any.
The oldest age recorded for a person to still have milk teeth is typically around 8-9 years old. After this age, most children will have started to lose their milk teeth and transition to their permanent teeth.
The deciduous (also called primary or milk) teeth are the first ones to appear and they are fully formed by age of 3. The complete deciduous teeth is 20. At age of 6 the first permanent teeth appear by displacing their predecessors. The complete number of permanent teeth is 32. Permanent teeth are stronger than the milk teeth. The word deciduous means to fall off or out. A tree that loses its' leaves in the Fall is called a deciduous tree. Ones that do not are called evergreens.