Animals have different mouth structures because of the things they eat and how they eat. For example: lions need to eat meat, so they will have a stronger jaw structure, to be able to chew and process the food. Whilst, turtles live on plants and so they will not need such a strong jaw structure...
instead of top front teeth they have a strong pad. but they do have top molers for grinding.
A beavers teeth is about one of your teeth but stacked on each other
Their teeth have evolved so that the lions can hunt down, kill and consume prey animals such as antelopes, giraffes, buffalo and other large herbivore mammals. The teeth are large, long and sharp so that when the lion bites, the teeth sink into the prey's muscles and lock there, preventing the prey from escaping.
A bat's teeth are typically small and sharp, designed for biting and tearing through insect exoskeletons or fruit. They are not as large or prominent as the teeth of carnivorous mammals like big cats or dogs.
It depends on the species.
Carnivorus animals have much sharp pointed teeth.Herbivors have flat,big teeth.
Buck Teeth.
Molars?
to hunt animals
the apatasauri had big flat teeth and they where big so they ate leaves.
Giraffe's have sharp teeth however they are not big. they need sharp teeth to chew grass i beleive and to sex
Big teeth, a flat tail, and the safest house in the forest.
They use their big and strong teeth in getting or eating food.
yes. i think they vary in size but they defiantly have some big teeth.
In comparison to those of humans or smaller animals, yes.
they don't have teeth and aren't big enough to eat animals... they eat insects
Yes, your teeth are responsible for mastication (chewing). Your responsible (front big teeth) are responding for cutting/biting, your canines (sharp pointy teeth) are responsible for tearing, and your molars (flat teeth located on the sides) are for chewing.