no. not usually.
The exact same way that a human's or a dog's ears work.
Same as just about all mammal's ears, skin and cartilage.
Look inside any mammal's ear, it's the same. Most have a much larger flare of the helix, but as you get closer to the auditory canal they all have the same complex series of folds. These folds exist so that different portions of the auditory spectrum are absorbed depending on which direction a sound is coming from, giving your brain one more way to separate the locations of sounds in space apart from simple binaural stereolocation.
The frequency that hurts human ears is typically around 4,000 to 6,000 Hertz.
more than 20000,0000 and counting --- There are around 6.7 billion humans on earth, so 13.4 billion human ears alone. But if you count all of the animal ears, there would be trillions.
If you are asking if ears are different for every human then yes. They are as identifiable as finger prints and are used in the UK as such.
Cats do not have any bones in their ears, only muscles are in their ears.
I am here and all ears to listen to what you have to say.
It is not possible for humans to have ears that are the same in size as to rats. The people with the smallest ears may be the African Pygmy people, as it is rumored that people of small height have short ears. Therefore, one could say that a country in Africa is the answer to your question, though it is highly unlikely that any human would have ears of similar size to a rodent.
arms legs hair nose mouth ears teeth eye torso limbs and THE SAME AS OTHER HUMANS!
a human with animal ears and tail
Yes. They LOVE ears. Their normal diet from day to day is human ears with a side of fingers