Cause it is growing wrong , There you go parent
For a child if they lose an upper tooth the child's parents will plant it in the ground and if a child loses a bottom tooth the child's parents will throw it on the rooftops so the new tooth will grow healthy and upwards.
Yes, it is very possible to have a tooth grow under a loose tooth. I have experienced this before. If the tooth hasn't come out when the tooth under it is almost done growing, you should see a dentist. I visited a dentist and got my tooth pulled out.
yes
The plural form of child is children; teeth is the plural of tooth.
The noun child's and the noun tooth are not plural nouns.The noun child's is the possessive form of the singular noun child (for example, a child's toy = a toy belonging to a child)The noun tooth is a singular noun. The plural noun is teeth.
A new tooth should not affect a filled tooth. If the filled tooth is tbeing replaced it will just fall out and the new tooth takes its place. If the new tooth is adjacent to or opposite the filled tooth it has no effect.
no that is not bad it just means your child's loose tooth is really lose
A baby tooth is a tooth which will be replaced when it has been lost by the child to whom it belongs, and replaced with a permanent, adult tooth.
King Lear. "... how sharper than a serpent's tooth it is to have a thankless child."
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.
SIX YEARS IS THE RIGHT TIME FOR YOUR CHILDS permanent incisor to erupt. To allow this eruption remove the loose front tooth yourself. The child can be convinced it is going to be painless and even she can do it herself.
long in the tooth