either le dents or la dents
A tooth is 'une dent' (fem.) in French.
une brosse à dents
un/une dentiste
une brosse à dents
tooth paste is 'du dentifrice' (masc.) in French.
Dent is tooth in French.
to have a tooth ache is 'avoir mal aux dents' in French. When you have a very acute 'mal de dents', you call it 'une rage de dents'
J'ai une dent perdre And You're Welcome Luvie(:
a tooth brush is 'une brosse à dents' in French.
Dente means tooth in French!:)
Yes, it is correct to say "in every tooth" when referring to something that occurs or exists within each individual tooth.
the tooth fairy takes your tooth and leaves a dollar(£1) for you
No, a lion is a lion, there is a flower called a dandelion, which means tooth of the lion. it is a "dent de Leon" French for lion's tooth
No, the correct phrasing is "four teeth." The word "teeth" is the plural form of "tooth."
nays
the old French name for a dandelion was 'dent-de-lion' (lion's tooth).