2 one in the back
a ant contact a other ant by using their antennea and clicking their jaws
You will need to be a little more specific. There are more than 10,000 species of ants on earth, and many of them are red. And what is more, many of them are called bull ants, and what does "stronger" mean for an ant? Stronger jaws? stronger legs?
Soldier Ant Soldier Ant
Ant lions build nests which have a sloped edge. The ants slide down the edge and into the ant lions open jaws.
paisley is NOT lexi's sister.........actually lexie dose NOT have a sister in ant farm....and if she dose she has not been metioned or seen in ant farm......and paisley if her bff fyi.
They are like human jaws in that they are used for biting. They differ in practically every other way. Ants (like other typical insects) have four jaws each (two mandibles, two maxillae); the jaws are not made of bone inside and flesh outside, but flesh inside and the hard part (a sort of concrete of sclerotin and chitin) outside. Ant jaws don't have separate teeth, but have serrations (saw-like pointy bits). Their jaws work from side to side instead of up and down. Their jaws are smaller in absolute terms because ants are smaller than humans, but usually larger in relative terms (a human with jaws like a bulldog ant would look like a crocodile). It is not easy to think of ways in which they are alike.
They are like human jaws in that they are used for biting. They differ in practically every other way. Ants (like other typical insects) have four jaws each (two mandibles, two maxillae); the jaws are not made of bone inside and flesh outside, but flesh inside and the hard part (a sort of concrete of sclerotin and chitin) outside. Ant jaws don't have separate teeth, but have serrations (saw-like pointy bits). Their jaws work from side to side instead of up and down. Their jaws are smaller in absolute terms because ants are smaller than humans, but usually larger in relative terms (a human with jaws like a bulldog ant would look like a crocodile). It is not easy to think of ways in which they are alike.
Usually on it's head. (Ex. Ant, beetle, cockroach)
Ants don't have teeth in the way that humans and other mammals have teeth. They have jaws called mandibles and maxillae, and those jaws have pointy bits on the part with which the ant bites. (Human jaws are also called mandibles and maxillae, but they are quite different.) The pointy bits on ants' jaws are usually called teeth, even by entomologists, the people who study insects. However, many such jaws have rows of teeth like a saw blade, and then we say that the jaw is serrated and the teeth may be called serrations. If you want to be technical, you can call one such tooth a dens, and could speak of dentes when there are many. Both words are from the Latin for tooth, from which we also get the word "dentist". If the teeth are very small, they can be called "denticles".
You kind of need a jawbone to have a jaw....
The creature you are referring to is the ant.
They are like human jaws in that they are used for biting. They differ in practically every other way. Ants (like other typical insects) have four jaws each (two mandibles, two maxillae); the jaws are not made of bone inside and flesh outside, but flesh inside and the hard part (a sort of concrete of sclerotin and chitin) outside. Ant jaws don't have separate teeth, but have serrations (saw-like pointy bits). Their jaws work from side to side instead of up and down. Their jaws are smaller in absolute terms because ants are smaller than humans, but usually larger in relative terms (a human with jaws like a bulldog ant would look like a crocodile). It is not easy to think of ways in which they are alike.