They can, especially after a tooth fracture and when the tooth is leveled with the gums.
This is called gingival hyperplasia.
yes
Well if it hurts under your tooth then probably there is another tooth trying to come in. You have to pull the tooth on top to let the one underneath grow in.
Each of the tooth surfaces are lingual, which faces the tongue, facial, which faces the lips, proximal, faces another tooth, occlusal, the top of the back teeth, and incisal ridge, the top of the front teeth.
The part of a tooth that is exposed and above the gum is called "crown", not to confuse with a crown that is prothesis to restore a heavily damaged tooth. The part of a tooth that is hidden inside the bone is called "root".
Yes, it grows on top of the soil.
it means you get two for the price of one
Your teeth are fixed to your jawbone in your mouth. They sit in a curved line along your top and bottom jaws. The white part of your tooth that you can see when you smile or open your mouth is called the crown. Some of your tooth is hidden under the skin (gum) in your mouth. This is called the root and you cannot see this in your mouth. The white covering on your tooth is called enamel. Dental enamel is strong and helps to protect the tooth. Dental enamel is the hardest thing in your whole body.For further information, go to The British Dental Health Foundation link.
The top layer of soil where grass grows is called Humus. The next layer is the topsoil, and the layer after that is the subsoil.
There is not a painless way to remove a tooth that is not ready to come out: When the new tooth under it grows in enough it will painlessly push out the top one. 1. Wiggle the tooth as much as you can to get it as loose as you can 2. If its loose enough start by pulling it down slowly 3. You are ready to pull it but do this slowly also 4. Your tooth should be out, it should bleed for a minute or so but it will stop ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A snake's tooth is called a tooth. It is only considered a "fang" if it is involved in the delivery of venom to some degree (is enlarged, grooved, or hollow), of which there are typically two present (one on each side of the top jaw, plus any replacements for those fangs, which may or may not be functioning in venom delivery).
Or, the new crack could be coincidental. Anyway, return to your dentist to be sure it is what you think.
Crown