well you just have to be blunt and say well i have noticed that you grind your teeth a lot especially when your sleeping. Then you should express the problems that come with teeth grinding like enamel damage and pain.
A grinding device.
Carnivore teeth are sharp and pointy for tearing meat but herbivore teeth are larger and flatter for grinding plants up
Those surfaces would be called the Occlusal surface of the posterior teeth.
Many would say that a platypus's mouth is like a beak of a duck. It is rather different, with its bill being broader and flatter than a duck's beak. Inside the platypus's mouth are grinding plates, instead of teeth, with which the platypus grinds its food.
The teeth grinding is a mechanical change. The saliva mixing in with the food and starting the digestive process would be a chemical change.
Lack of space causes this. It happens a lot to children that their permanent teeth come before the milk tooth fall out. To be sure, ask the dentist if there is a problem. Most of the time this is no problem at all and the teeth will adjust in time. When this happens to adults, it is a sure sign the jaws are too small to support all teeth. Which could be a problem in case the teeth are so close together that it's hard to keep them clean enough.
You would expect to find a mixture of different kinds of teeth. Omnivores need "slicing" teeth (incisors), "tearing" teeth (canines or bicuspids), and "grinding" teeth (molars). Having these allows them to eat a wider variety of food. Animals that specialize in just one type of food may omit one or more of these kinds of teeth, because they're not useful ... most herbivores have either small or no canines, for example (some herbivores have tusks, but they're modified incisors rather than modified canines).Teeth are directly related to diet . Teeth of carnivores are with conical and pointed cusps for tearing prey as in lion . Teeth of herbivores are with flat cusps to grinding vegetation and are called solenodonts and lophodonts as in deer , camel and elephant . teeth in omnivores are intermediate between these two extremes and are called bunodont . such teeth can be used for eating meet and grinding vegetation as in man
Teeth grinding is a medical condition wherein a person unconsciously clenches his or her teeth, usually while asleep.Teeth grinding or bruxism, is not merely a habit. In fact, it is a condition that is currently being addressed by today's medicine. Doctors believe that bruxism is caused by a number of factors. Here are five examples of the common causes of teeth grinding.Stress is the most common reason for bruxism. Most doctors suppose that stress is the primary cause of teeth grinding during sleep. Stress can disrupt a person's sleeping cycle. If a particular sleeping pattern is disrupted, the person ends up clenching their teeth unconsciously and intermittently during sleep. This is where a lot of researchers are currently focusing on, as this explanation is the one most common.
you have something in your teeth
Would you like your teeth to rot?? And nothing turns off somebody more than someone with black teeth....
No. grinding poverty would be debasing
Assuming you are talking about teeth- they are for grinding. In Evolutionary terms, they would have been used to get through the gristle in raw meat when we were hunters. I guess mammoth meat would have been tough.