they are sharper then a lion
Yes
No. Hawks have talons and a sharp, pointed beak, but they don't have fangs.
Sharp-shinned hawks live in a several different places. They live in South America, Canada, the U. S. , Central America, and the Greater Antilles.
Accipiter hawks like the European sparrow hawk and the sharp shinned and Cooper's hawks of North America do, as does the falcon known as the kestrel.
Red-tail, Broad-wing, Red-shouldered, Gos, Coopers, Sharp-shinned, are the most comm.
Have you ever seen a picture of one? It has a sharp, curving beak reminiscent of that of a hawk.
Hawks do not have teeth. They use their sharp talons and curved beaks to tear food before eating it. Birds do not have teeth.
The hawks found in Georgia in the US are: Red-tailed Hawks, Red Shouldered Hawks, Cooper's Hawks, Sharp-shinned Hawks, Broad Wing Hawks, harrier (in winter). Also, peregrine falcon, kestrel, and merlin are found there to some degree.
tigers wolfs and all that stuff
The two birds are nearly identical except for size. The Cooper's hawk is larger, and the tail when folded is rounded, not squared off or notched like in the sharp shinned.
Gosshawks and Coopers hawks may eat a horned lawk as they are both accipiters along with the sharp-shinned hawk but sharp-shinned hawks are smaller and normally choose the small songbirds as prey.
Snakes, small Birds of Prey, as the Cooper's and sharp shinned hawks.