Yes, this is normal for you, just as it is for adults, too. But if the tooth gets actually loose, then you may need to see a dentist. Unless that happens, there is nothing to worry about.
Yes, it is perfectly normal to still be losing your teeth at nine years old. My sister was done losing teeth by nine, yet I finished losing them at thirteen!
heck no youve got a problem if the same teeth have come out before, no its not normal, go see a dentist. if they havent, yes it is normal, just early.
Jah Wobble is 53 years old (birthdate: August 11, 1958).
Its not that common but it does happen. I myself and my daughter got our wisdom teeth at 12/13 years old, the normal time to get them is 17/21 years of age but you can get them earlier or later than that.
Yes, but only if you keep it there for at leat 3 years continuously. So, not really going to work then is it...
it means you are still growing and your skeleton still has gaps in it. pretty normal.
21,000-26,000 years, caused by wobble of earth about its axis.
For adults it is usually 32 perminant teeth including wisdom teeth. 16 on the top and 16 on the bottom. Children have 20 deciduous teeth in total and start getting their first perminant teeth around 6 years old.
In short, no. It depends on your age, by about 12 years old you should have lost all of your deciduous (baby) teeth, and your permanent teeth should all be there by about 17 years old with the exception of your 3rd molar (wisdom teeth) that usually come out between 17-25 years. Most people have 32 permanent teeth including the wisdoms, but some people don't get them leaving them with only 28.
A couple billion years, but only if the Mighty Parrot is tired.
This is PERFECTLY NORMAL. He may be a late-bloomer tooth-wise, but at 8 years old many children's adult teeth have not grown in. If I remember correctly, my adult front teeth grew in when I was around 7-8 years old, while some children my age lost theirs at 10! It can also depend on genetics, compare his tooth growth to your own or another family member's.
in one hundred years will the finger monkey still exist?