theres a level where you have to kill the dinosaurs.... if you use a tsunami, youll get the starite and kill the dinosaurs. this got me the badge, an di hope it helped a little :P
Skin o' My Teeth was created in 1993-01.
The skin between your top lip & front teeth is called the Frenum.
yes there are more teeth fossils than skin fossils
Bite your finger really hard. If it doesn't hurt the answer is yes, your teeth have skin! If it hurts, then the answer is... well... no, your teeth don't really have skin on them. If you don't want to bite your finger, then you = smart 'cuz it'll hurt really bad, meaning there is absolutely no skin on your teeth at all.
Teeth. Skin, hair and nails are all formed from a layer called the dermis.
You passed the course by the skin of your teeth, so you won't have to repeat it next semester.
Frogs have smooth skin and usually have small teeth in their upper jaws, and toads have lumpy skin and no teeth at all.
The pig skin has been shed
By the skin of one's teeth comes from a misquotation from the book of Job. He has lost everything, his friends and family have turned against him. "my bone cleaves to my skin and flesh and I am escaped with the skin of my teeth." A earlier translation says: " No bone hangs to my skin and the flesh and all I have is the skin around my teeth". This where is comes from but we now say that it means a 'close shave' or a win that wasn't a 'sure bet'.
The gums are the pink skin that the teeth are connected to.
if you are successful but only by the skin of your teeth it means you barely did it. You can win a game by the skin of your teeth, pass an exam by the skin of your teeth or you can beat a red light by the skin of your teeth. You still win but only by the smallest of margins.Just barely, very narrowly, as in Doug passed the exam by the skin of his teeth.A related term appears in the Bible (Job 19:20), where Job says, "I am escaped with the skin of my teeth," presumably meaning he got away with nothing at all. Today the phrase using by is used most often to describe a narrow escape. [c. 1600]If you do something by the skin of your teeth, you only just manage to do it, and come very near indeed to failing.