The root of the tooth.
The tooth should be handled carefully; it should be picked up or touched by its crown (the top part of the tooth), not by its root. The tooth should be rinsed and kept moist, but not cleaned or brushed.
The word "knocked" can serve as both a verb (e.g. "She knocked on the door") and a past participle (e.g. "The door was knocked down").
The best way is to collect the knocked out teeth and place them in a Save-A-Tooth system. These should be purchased ahead of time (saveatooth.com) and placed in an emergency first aid kit along with band-aids, burn cream and betadine. This devise is a six-part system with a special preserving fluid, Hank's Balanced Salt Solution, a suspension net and retrieval basket. When used within an hour of the accident, 90% of all knocked out teeth can be successfully reimplanted and retained for life. Teeth placed in a Save-A-Tooth will be preserved for 24 hours.
The part of the tooth above the gum is the sulcus this is the neck of the tooth.
The part of the tooth that has the nerves in it is right under the crown of your tooth ''aka'' the top part of your tooth and they travel down into you gums hope this help's
The tooth root is the part of the tooth that is embedded within the jawbone and anchors the tooth in place. It is located beneath the gum line and connects to the crown of the tooth, which is the visible part in the mouth.
No part of "tooth decay" is a structure or function.
enamel found only in the crown of the tooth ( the exposed part of the tooth ), dentin found in both the crown and the root of the tooth ( root : the embedded part of the tooth ) and cement which hold the tooth in it's place
you should try the back of the neck or the chest.
i think you are referring to the lingual fossa.
the dentine
The part of the tooth that fits into the socket of the jaw(mandible) or maxilla(for upper teeth) is the "root" of the tooth.