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molars
Vampire bats have sharp and strong canine teeth for shearing flesh, and strong molars for crushing bones.
It allows the animal to rip and tear apart the meat of whatever animal they happen to be eating.
The sharp fangs in an animal's mouth are all called canine teeth. The names of the teeth are incisors for cutting and snipping, canines for ripping and puncturing, premolars and molars for grinding and crushing. Felines and humans both have canine teeth. It would be too confusing to call them feline teeth in a cat and homo teeth in a human, so we call them all the name we first thought of by studying dogs - canine.
Molars are the teeth in the back of your mouth that are flat and cube shaped. Canines also refered to as vampire teeth, are the teeth on the sides of your smile that are the sharpest out of all of your teeth.
Once they Kill their prey they sink their sharp and deadly canine teeth into the prey's flesh, they rip away a 'chunk' of meat and use their molars/pre-molars to chew their food a little bit, but they mostly swallow the peice of meat whole
Bicuspid teeth are first and second premolars. They are located between canine and first molars. They have at least two cusps. Bicuspid from Latin mean: bi- two;cuspis - sharp point.
shark
flat. for grinding and chewing.mainly molars for grinding plant matter
Their molars can be quite sharp.
Lions have molars and sharp canines.
Your canine teeth aren't supposed to be super sharp when you're a kid but they are pointy like mine are at the age of 10.