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The mandibular arch forms the tooth bearing bones of the upper and lower jaw.
answer is B. the maxillary lateral incisors
A palatoquadrate is the dorsal part of the mandibular arch in some fish.
First branchial arch also known as the mandibular arch is the right answer.
Drink Milk!
Primate space is the gap between the primary teeth of a child. These are normal. They are the result of the jaws growing to accommodate the larger adult teeth. CORRECTION! - yes, spacing is normal in children, but the term "PRIMATE SPACE" is more specific: In the mandibular arch, the primate space is between the canine and the 1st molar (or 1st premolar in adults). Whereas, in the maxillary arch, it is between the lateral incisors and canines.
First Molar :)
It is a fixed, spring-loaded dental instrument using four helix springs, that is designed to expand the maxillary dental arch and widen your upper jaw in corrective dental treatment.
The Mandibular Labial Frenum, is located in the lower dental arch, between the two lower central incisors.
maxillary permanent molars have a distally inclined path of eruption initially as they erupt they become more horizontally positioned in such situation mesial migration of the erupting tooth is very rare
32 mm
there a 4 types of teeth: incisors- single-rooted teeth with a sharp, thin edge, located at the front of the mouth, they sut food. canines- or cuspids, are located at the corner of the arch, that are designed for cutting & tearing foods, that may requires some force premolars- there are 4 maxillary & 4 mandibular premolars, thy are a cross between canines & molars, or bicuspids, this refers to 2 (bi) cusps & some premolars have 3 cusps, pointed buccal cusps hold the food while the lingual cusps grind it, premolars are not as long as canines, & they have a broader surface for chewing food molars are much larger than premolars, 4 or more cusps, the function of the 12 molars is to chew or grind up food, there are 4 or 5 cusps on the occlusal (biting) surface of each molar, depending on its location, maxillary & mandibular molars differ from each other in their shape, size, number of cusps, & roots.