Eggs and teeth are both made from calcium salts.:)
She is a Kindergarten teacher, and sometimes a substitue teacher.
"The great taste is good for your teeth"
The answer is "mare".The expression "as scarce as hen's teeth" means that it doesn't exist (because they don't). The original meaning of "mare's nest" is something illusory--or doesn't exist.In addition to the parallel meaning between the two expressions or idioms, there is also a parallel construction, with a possessive in each case: hen's teeth; mare's nest.This is important in an analogy question, which requires an exact parallel for the answer to be correct (A is to B as X is to Y).The parallel construction provides the test against which other "possible" answers to this analogy can be tried. There are plenty of things that don't exist, for example, but only one expression or idiom that shares with "hen's teeth" both meaning and the possessive construction.
You can tell if eggs are old by dropping one in a cup or bowl of water. If the egg floats, it is bad. If it sinks, it is good.
baked beans on toast or omelette,scrambled eggs
If you do not eat eggs then a good substitue for the protein is fish, chicken and red meat. A balanced diet does not require eggs.
Yes eggs have vital minerals like phosphorous and calcium that are good for teeth
In food eggs
Nothing..
No, you shouldn't really substitute for eggs, but usually water and oil are used to substitue. (Not one or the other, a little of both)
Wax and clay.
substitue
The answer is yes. There are also other things you can use. You can read here about replacing eggs in a recipe: http://vegetarian.about.com/od/vegetarianvegan101/f/eggsubstitute.htm
snapping turtles have teeth so they can protect themselves and their eggs
There is no set number of eggs that a hen can/has to lay. The average amount for a good layer is one egg every one to three days.
they use eggs to compare to teeth because they are readily available. they are also very close in shade to hethy teeth. plus, the chemical makeup is extremely similar.
snapping turtles have teeth so they can protect themselves and their eggs