Baby teeth :)
there are no premolars in primary dentition
milk teeth Deciduous teeth. Reborner teeth. Baby teeth. Temporary teeth. Primary teeth. In Asia: Fall teeth. In Europe: Milk teeth.
incisors
Puppies lose all of their baby or milk teeth. As the adult teeth grow in the milk teeth should fall out. Sometimes both will be visible.
no you are born with your milk teeth first then after they fall your adult teeth come into play
All baby teeth are deciduous (they fall out) and do not grow back. However, after they fall out, they are typically replaced by the permanent "adult" teeth. Sometimes, though, the baby teeth don't fall out. And sometimes, the adult teeth don't grow in. But "normally" a child will lose all their teeth and they will be replaced by their permanent teeth.
Pitbulls have 28 milk teeths when puppy and 42 teeth when they are grown up. They replace the milk teeths with the permanent teeth.
They usually begin to fall out at 5 or 6 years of age, but can occur a year earlier or later. The last of the "baby" teeth will fall out around 12 or 13 years of age.
Most commonly all 20 milk/baby teeth. However some people lose less and they fall when they are much older which people mistaken as third generation teeth
The deciduous (also called primary or milk) teeth are the first ones to appear and they are fully formed by age of 3. The complete deciduous teeth is 20. At age of 6 the first permanent teeth appear by displacing their predecessors. The complete number of permanent teeth is 32. Permanent teeth are stronger than the milk teeth. The word deciduous means to fall off or out. A tree that loses its' leaves in the Fall is called a deciduous tree. Ones that do not are called evergreens.
They are known as 'milk teeth', which eventually fall out (leading to the tooth-fairy leaving a coin under a child's pillow!) and are replaced by the permanent adult teeth.
Deciduous teeth are what are commonly referred to as baby teeth - the teeth will fall out as they are replaced with permanent adult teeth.teeth that are losable