The French word for teeth is "dents".
I don't know when you'd ever use this, but "Has anyone got any teeth" in English is "Quelqu'un at-il des dents" in French.
"Il est beau et a de belles dents." Thats how you say he is handsome and has nice teeth in French.
"Je me brosse les dents."
il brosse ses dents, il se brosse les dents
The past tense for "grinding teeth" is "ground teeth."
teeth
"I brush my teeth!" in English is Je me brosse les dents!in French.
dents
dents.
Lion's teeth in 'dent de lion' in French. That gave the name 'dandelion' in English (no more in French where the plant is nowadays called 'pissenlit').
depends, if the person doesnt brush their teeth and tongue. then when you french kiss, their gross tongue will be rubbing agaimst your teeth.
I don't know when you'd ever use this, but "Has anyone got any teeth" in English is "Quelqu'un at-il des dents" in French.
De se brosser les dentsThat means 'to brush one's teeth'
You don't... The teeth get in the way... If your going to kiss someone with buck teeth my recommendation is to not french kiss he might accidentally bite down on you tongue...
You don't put your teeth anywhere. When you kiss you use your lips. In a french kiss you use your tongue. So you wont be using your teeth. To kiss you touch the other persons lips with yours, purse them a little. For a french kiss you open your lips and massage the other persons tongue with yours.
une brosse a dents
It shouldn't be bad for anything ! Kissing with inserting the tongue into the other persons mouth may pick-up bugs and germs from their saliva though so always clean your mouth and teeth after french kissing.