No. A dentist can fabricate a duplicate set, but your permanent's are called that for a reason.
Dogs have similar teeth development to humans - they have one set of deciduous ("baby") teeth and a second set of permanent ("adult") teeth. However, once their permanent teeth come in, there are no replacements for them.
Yes they do, all teeth have a second set of teeth
Yes they do, all teeth have a second set of teeth
Yes, cervids have a set of deciduous ('milk') teeth before their permanent teeth erupt. The upper teeth are first composed of a second, a third and a fourth premolar. They are then substituted by a permanent second, third and fourth premolars and molars 1, 2 and 3. They also develop two canines on the upper part. In the lower part, a deciduous second, third and fourth premolars are subistuted by permanent second, third and fourth premolars, a first, second and third molars. They also shed deciduous incisors one, two and three as well as a canine, and are then subsistuted by permanent ones. A good book on the matter is 'Teeth' by Simon Hillson (first and second editions) published by Cambridge University Press.
"baby" & permanent.
Normally, a human receives two sets of teeth during a lifetime. The first (deciduous or primary) set consists of 20 teeth ("baby" teeth). The second (permanent) set usually consists of 32 teeth. In each quadrant, there are eight permanent teeth: two incisors, one cuspid, two bicuspids, and three molars
32 with wisdoms
There are 32 teeth total in a complete set of permanent teeth.
The teeth used for determining age is the front row of incisors (cows do not have a top row of teeth). When a calf is born they usually only have one pair of middle incisors (these will appear smaller). At 1-2 years they will grow their second set of permanent incisors. 3-4 years they will gain their third set of permanent incisors, then finally the corner pair of incisors. Between the age of 5-6 the middle teeth and the corner teeth will start to show wear by levelling out. Then at 10 and over all eight teeth will begin to show wear.
Horses lose their deciduous or "baby" teeth. When horses are born they already have their secondary set of teeth underneath their "baby teeth" just as humans do. The permanent set of teeth will grow in and push the primary set of teeth out.
Losing your primary teeth and getting your permanent teeth is the process. It is a normal function in life. Many people are still getting their full set of permanent teeth in their early 20s.
28, 14 on the top 14 on the bottom. Unless you have wisdom teeth you will have 32.