Mandibular first premolar
If the driving wheel has more number of teeth, and the driven wheel has less number of teeth then there will be a gain in SPEED .If the number of tooth in the driver is less in the driving wheel and there is more number of tooth in the driven wheel , there will be a gain in TORQUE.
because the less plaque on your teeth means less bacteria and less bacteria using the sugar on your teeth means less acid causing tooth decay
Numb your tooth with ice or a popsicle then yank it out, the faster the less it will hurt!
To make the horns less dangerous. Horns that have points at the ends are like the ends of a dagger or spear, and are far more likely to gore and rip someone or something open than if their horns are tipped or have caps on them.
Blunt, pointless, obtuse, edentate...
No
They're more or less like uruk'hai from Lord of the Rings. They have horns though.
With a pair of sharp secateurs and it is only the tip as in half a centimetre or less
Less than tooth density (unless you're older)
It doesn't hurt you, but it is painful for the animal, yes. Use of local anaesthetic is more commonly used with dehorning cattle, as well as the choice to dehorn cattle when they are very young and when the horns are just mere buds--not full grown horns. It hurts an animal worse when you're removing the full horn rather than when they have buds. Another common practice producers are using are using polled bulls over cows to reduce the number of calves with horns and reduce--possibly eliminate--the number of calves that need to be dehorned. Tipping is also done in older cattle, like with rodeo bulls to make it less likely for someone to get gored. Producers also use horn weights to make the horns grow down and in rather than out and up. Horns that are growing out and up are more dangerous than ones that are pointed down. It does not hurt the animal to tip the horns nor use horn weights.
yes. i have it in my mouth as we speak.
Tooth is the term used to determine the roughness of the ground (paper,artist's board, etc.) on which you are intending to draw. A ground with little tooth is generally smooth and polished with a "hard" surface. This sort of ground gathers less of your medium. A ground with a lot of tooth is generally rougher and coarser with a "softer" surface. This sort of ground will gather more of you medium with much less pressure than a smoother surface.