Not in the way a human can, no. A cat's jaw can only move up and down, and their sharp premolars and molars are serrated and act like scissors; they cut up meat into bite-size chunks in order for the cat to swallow. A cat's teeth and jaw are not designed to grind up food into a pulp like a human can.
Generally they will lick bones, rather than chew them, but yes, it is normal for them to give a bone a good working over to make sure there's nothing of interest left on it.
yes
No, not in the way a cow does, dogs do not chew the cud. ***** Dogs and cats are known to regurgitate food and re-eat the food again. But, especially with dogs, dogs (being pack animals in instinct) gulp their food and not chew their food.
They use the grip on their tongue and scop it up into their mouths and chew
Bite, tear, and chew. A lion, like most cats, does not grind its food.
Cats use their noses and scent glands in their mouths to find food. They use claws to pull food toward them or to hold a prey. They then use their mouth, teeth, and gums to pull apart and chew food.
A hawk has a beak and therefore can not chew food, to chew food you need teeth to chew with.
yes the do
They do not. Cats do not "chew their cud".
seahorses do not chew their food because they do not have teeth
No they do not, they swallow their food whole.
saliva squrited in your mouth when you chew.
Cats can eat crunchy food, yes. Dry cat food is hard and crunchy. However many cats don't usually chew such crunchy food; many will bite once or twice or even swallow them whole. A cat's teeth is designed to shred meat, not bite into crunchy biscuit pieces.
It is recommended that humans chew their food thoroughly.