well, it can become slightly "less wobbly" by treating the tooth with better oral hygiene practices, but once the periodontal support has gone, it's not coming back
to stop the tooth wobbling, you would need to brace it somehow, such as with a bridge
If an adult tooth is wobbly (but is not being "pushed out" by another tooth), the likely treatment is an extraction, usually with a cosmetic replacement. However if the tooth is only slightly wobbly (but not really getting in the way), extraction is not normally necessary. However there are many causes for loose adult teeth, so it's not easy to generalise treatment.
Braces are only used to re-aline teeth and do not prevent wobblyness.
Not sure
yes but a adult tooth cant grow in place of an adult tooth
A baby tooth is smaller than a adult tooth.
No, The adult teeth forms separate from the child tooth. However if nutrition is not improved while the adult tooth is coming before the adult tooth comes in, there is a higher chance it will be weak and more prone to decay.
You can't really, if you shake you shake, just try to work with it.
When the adult tooth is coming in
Go to the dentist, or if its alreday wobbling than just slowly keep moving it and soon it will automatically fall out.
Then you don't have a tooth, you can get a false tooth though
You probably have either a congenitally missing or impacted permanent adult tooth.
Have a vet do it.
yes
This is very common in children where the adult tooth comes out behind or in front of the baby tooth. Sometimes the baby tooth becomes loose as the adult tooth comes out more and extraction is not necessary. If the tooth is not becoming loose, then the tooth should be removed. Dentist Richmond Hill http://www.bcdentalcare.ca/NewPatients/tabid/472/Default.aspx