i dont' think so.
yes you can get a tooth brush for it and tooth pased
Put tooth paste on your tooth brush and then scrub your teeth and tongue with the tooth brush. You then spit out the lather and rinse your mouth a few times. Rinse out the sink and then enjoy your fresh new smile.
you use toothpaste by squeeseing it onto your brush and brushing everywhere in your mouth brush behind your teeth too because it is dirty there and not many people do so when you have brushed every part of your mouth rinse your mouth twice to make sure you got rid of the tooth paste. tooth paste does not clean your teeth as much as your brush does
Get a tooth brush and tooth paste and there brush your teeth….DUH!!
It depends on the size of your mouth and how much tooth paste you use
chew gum, soap and floss
Good question. I would say it's called tooth brush because of the size of the brush. Technically, it really only brushes one tooth at the time, hence a teeth brush would be longer and more cumbersome to use in the mouth.
Even if you have a loose tooth, you should still brush your teeth. It may hurt, but if you want to, don't brush the tooth that is loose. Enjoy this answer!
I have just recently done a tooth exposure for one of my canine teeth. The pain has gone down ..but im still worried on how to brush my teeth. If I brush my teeth with the stitches become loose and then there could be loosening of the stitching in my upper mouth ? How am I suppose to brush ? Do I avoid all contact with that area? Do I avoid tooth paste and rinse with a salt and water solution ? Thnks
It certainly does it kill most of the bacteria and germs but you might want to use mouth wash, it also kills and using anti bacterial soup and scrub it on your tooth brush.. Rinse the tooth brush well. That really helps. Hoped I helped. (: ps: your tooth brush should be boiled for 5-10 mins.
Technically, a tooth brush does not kiss tooth paste because neither are living things. Tooth paste is applied to a tooth brush to clean and maintain one's teeth.
You brush the tooth up and down left and right in a circularizing motion.