To tear and chew forage.
I wish.
Cows do not have canine teeth.
Yes. It is not uncommon for a calf to be born with a few teeth already poking above the gum-line.
Yes.
Herbivorous teeth: flat, angled incisors and flat molars to chew grass. Cows only have a lower set of incisors, and have no teeth on the upper part of their jaw except for the molars in the back to grind forage. All ungulates (including cows) lack upper incisors and "canine" teeth.
yes they do
Pallet.
Cows have a total of 32 teeth, consisting of incisors, canines, premolars, and molars. They use their sharp incisors to tear grass and their flat premolars and molars to grind food for digestion. Cows do not have upper front teeth, but they do have a dental pad on their upper jaw that helps with grazing.
no
They are flat molars, similar to that of a human's. Cows have molars both on the top and bottom jaws. Do not confuse incisors with molars, because it's the incisors (the front teeth) that cows and other ruminants lack that make people say they have "no upper teeth."
Yes, it is different to a cows as cows have one instead of top fron teeth, horses have them between the incisors and the premolars.
Of course! The cows need all the molars they can get. Their diet consists mainly of cellulose and digesting it requires a lot of molar work:)