The badger. It has sharp teeth so it is technically classed as an carnivore, though it mainly eats berries and small anthropods, making it an omnivore.
Sharp teeth are not needed for eating worms and insect or berries.
Also, the Siberian deer and muntjac deer have fangs for scraping moss in icy conditions
These would be omnivores, which include humans and monkey, chimpanzees etc.
Unfortunately, all animals bite. If an animal has a mouth and teeth, chances are it will bite you if it feels threatened.
a horse
They eat both plants and animals.
They eat both plants and animals.
Dogs have sharp teeth, like canines, for tearing and slicing meat, while flat teeth, like molars, are used for grinding and crushing food like bones or kibble. This combination of teeth allows dogs to efficiently capture, tear, and chew their food for digestion.
the carnivore has sharp teeth and the herbivore has dull teeth. the omnivore has sharp teeth and dull teeth.
Omnivores have both. They have sharp canines and wide flat molars.
Herbivores have broad and sharp teeth in the front to break (tear) the food and a broad flat teeth on its back side for grinding the food.
flat teeth
Carnivorus animals have much sharp pointed teeth.Herbivors have flat,big teeth.
FLAT
They are vegetarians, so they need flat teeth to grind up leaves and other plants, carnivore animals need sharp teeth to rip apart meat.
Pretty sharp, though the real danger is the biting power of the jaw that allows them to break bones.
it depends on its environment like animals that live in a plant environment would have flat teeeth because it doesn't need sharp teeth to eat meat