no
Frogs use the muscles of their eyes and pull their eyeballs down which pushes the pray down. The tongue is rather used for catching and holding the pray. Tongueless frogs (Pipidae) push their food in their mouth with there front legs. This looks strange, as the frogs 'eats with his hands'.
The position of their teeth allows them to hold down their prey in their mouth so they can break it down with their saliva, then push the food down the esophagus with their eyes. This is because frogs can't chew or swallow their food, so they have to push it down their throat, and have it broken down in their mouth.
A hawk has a beak and therefore can not chew food, to chew food you need teeth to chew with.
they use their teeth to grab their food and they don't chew their food
Frogs primarily break down their food through a combination of mechanical and chemical processes. They use their strong tongues to catch prey, which is then swallowed whole; frogs generally do not chew their food. The food passes into their stomach, where digestive enzymes break it down into smaller, absorbable nutrients before it moves into the intestines for further digestion and absorption. This efficient process allows frogs to quickly extract energy from their prey.
To chew their food.
no, you dont use the same part of your brain to chew as you do to write
Ther legs
Frogs all use sight, and strike at their prey usually by ambush.
ur back teeth
The word, masticate, means to chew, as in "Masticate (chew) your food well before swallowing."
your molars are the ones you chew with