Many types of dinosaurs had beaks. There were ceratopsians, hadrosaurs, stegosaurs, ankylosaurs, and some types of theropods, including birds and Oviraptorosaurs.
A dinosaur with winds and a beak is called a bird. Sometimes pterosaurs are said to be this, but this is in correct as pterosaurs were not dinosaurs.
A ceratopsian dinosaur is a frilled, horned, quadrupedal, herbivorous dinosaur with a beak. The most famous member of this group of dinosaurs is Triceratops.
Hadrosaur was a herbivore with a large beak and its name contains 9 lettters.
Dinosaurs are very related to birds and reptiles. One evidence that dinosaurs are related to birds is the dinosaur named Archeopthyx. At first, I really don't know the spelling of this dinosaur. But this dinosaur has feathers. It has a beak-like mouth and has sharp teeth.
The questioner may mean RAPTOR, either a smaller, carnivorous dinosaur or a modern bird of prey with a grasping foot. The bird raptors have hooked beaks; the dinosaur raptors typically had toothed jaws.
A finch's beak is usually short, thick, and conical in shape. It is adapted for cracking seeds and nuts, their main food source. The size and shape of the beak can vary between finch species depending on their diet and habitat.
two very not pointy triangles put together.
I know of three off the top of my head. Citipati was a small feathered dinosaur with a beak and headcrest. Incisivosaurus was a feathered dinosaur that appeared to be bucktoothed. Microraptor was a small feathered dinosaur that lived in the trees, and had feathers on both its arms and legs that were used as "wings" for gliding.
Most Reptiles have small, sharp, serrated teeth due to the fact that they are carnivores.
Therizinosaurus - It had a pot belly, long neck, gigantic claws, and a beak. This dinosaur measured 26 ft long! Although it looked like a carnivore, it was actually an omnivore. It lived in Mongolia in the late Cretaceous period.
The name of a long-tailed herbivorous bipedal dinosaur is a Hadrosaur, also known as duck-billed dinosaurs. They were characterized by their beak-like mouths and rows of teeth, and they lived during the Late Cretaceous period.
no bird has ever had teeth except the early dinosaur birds