well.... It would be really hard to get milk and meat from the cows and lions would be harmless
Cow
If by round, you mean 'not sharp' that would be most of the vegetarian animals, such as: cows, deer and koalas. They have wider flatter teeth in order to chew plants, grass, leaves and vegetation, kind of like the molars humans have in the back of the mouth.
broad,flat teeth
Herbivorous teeth: flat, angled incisors and flat molars to chew grass. Cows only have a lower set of incisors, and have no teeth on the upper part of their jaw except for the molars in the back to grind forage. All ungulates (including cows) lack upper incisors and "canine" teeth.
Their mouth, including their tongues and lower incisors.
it is black, it has long sharp white teeth and it also sucks cow bloodadd me on ps3 username: "snabobo"
A cow has the typical teeth of a herbivore, with flattened grinding surfaces; while a lion has typical carnivore teeth, pointed and sharp for tearing flesh
Cow's teeth are similar to our back teeth; our molars. All of their teeth are flat because of the constant grinding motion they make with their mouth. They only eat plant products such as grass or corn, unlike humans who are omnivores and eat both meat and plants. Our front teeth are more pointed so that we are able to tear food.
A Lion
The adult human teeth show a morphology mainly differentiated by the shape of their upper surface (crown) and the number of the tooth roots. Individual tooth morphology is associated with the purpose of each tooth type (cutting, shredding or grinding the food).
A cow with almost no teeth.
The direct object is cow subject = lion verb = attacked object = cow