No. I think you mean a thresher shark, which sometimes has a tail 10 feet long and stuns fish with it.
The parts of a great white shark for it to keep its balance is its tail fin and side fins. The side fins keep it balanced, and the tail fin steers and moves the shark.
there is a slight difference, white pointer sharks have white on there bellies so when they are on top of an enemy and they look up all they see is whiteness. great white shark has whitish grey but they don't use it for the same reason. also white pointer sharks put up their dorsal fin and their tail fin (but the tail slightly shorter than the dorsal) but the great white shark only puts up its dorsal fin.
The Basking Shark is a filter feeder, it has no teeth and feeds using modified gill-rakers which 'filter' out small food animals from the water, so if your question relates to bites strength the Great White is decidedly the strongest. Being active hunters the Great White are also fast swimmers with a highly muscled tail and body.
A white tail bumblebee does have a stinger and will sting humans or other animals when it feels you are a danger to it. These bees also have a short tongue when compared to other bees.
The shark can only be propelled forward (or turn in a circle) by sideways movement of the tail.
Top one, bottom-front two, bottom-back two, tail one
stinger?
Their side fins help to keep them stable and not to roll. They use their tail for locomotion and can be used as a weapon to hit other sharks or prey.
A scorpion.
Scorpion
With the stinger on the tip of their tail (:
A great white shark protects itself from predators with its distinctive coloring. The dark top side of its body makes it difficult for predators to see it from above while the light bottom side makes it tough for predators to see it from below. The white shark also has sharp teeth and a powerful tail to escape predators or attack when cornered.