Yes. The only tooth that a modern bird could have that I am aware of is an egg tooth that some chicks possess when they are trying to hatch from the egg but the egg tooth falls off soon after hatching.
Birds don't have teeth, they've got beaks instead.
Toothless theropods would probably be birds. Many scientists consider birds to be theropod dinosaurs which have beaks instead of teeth.
No, they are birds and birds have beaks.
Barred owls have approximately approximatly 9,200 individual feathers.
No existing bird of any species has teeth. Birds have beaks.
No modern birds have no teeth. However, Peregrine Falcons are different. You see, they have something called tomial teeth, which are very similar to teeth. They are basically four sharp notches, on either side of their beak. When they kill their prey, they use these tomial teeth to sever their victim's spinal cord.
No turtles have teeth. They all have beaks instead.
birds dont have teeth,they have beaks. but baby birds have an "egg tooth", a tooth on the front of their beaks that helps them get out of their egg, that falls off after they hatch from the egg.
Birds don't have teeth, but some have serrated bills.
NO, because the giraffe have teeth and it not a bird
No birds had true teeth, but there are some species that had serrated bills that worked as teeth.
Turtles have beaks instead of teeth. If they are carnivorous they have a sharper beak. if they are herbivores they have blunt beaks.