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tooth
[tooth]
noun
plural
teeth(in most vertebrates) one of the hard bodies or processes usually attached in a row to each jaw, serving for the prehension and mastication of food, as weapons of attack or defense, etc., and in mammals typically composed chiefly of dentin surrounding a sensitive pulp and covered on the crown with enamel.
(in invertebrates) any of various similar or analogous processes occurring in the mouth or alimentary canal, or on a shell.
any projection resembling or suggesting a tooth.
one of the projections of a comb, rake, saw, etc.
Machinery.
any of the uniform projections on a gear or rack by which it drives, or is driven by, a gear, rack, or worm.
any of the uniform projections on a sprocket by which it drives or is driven by a chain.
Botany.
any small, toothlike marginal lobe.
one of the toothlike divisions of the peristome of mosses.
a sharp, distressing, or destructive attribute or agency.
taste, relish, or liking.
a surface, as on a grinding wheel or sharpening stone, slightly roughened so as to increase friction with another part.
a rough surface created on a paper made for charcoal drawing, watercolor, or the like, or on canvas for oil painting.
verb (used with object)
to furnish with teeth.
to cut teeth upon.
verb (used without object)
to interlock, as cogwheels.
tooth
/ tuːθ /
noun
any of various bonelike structures set in the jaws of most vertebrates and modified, according to the species, for biting, tearing, or chewing
any of various similar structures in invertebrates, occurring in the mouth or alimentary canal
anything resembling a tooth in shape, prominence, or function
the tooth of a comb
any of the various small indentations occurring on the margin of a leaf, petal, etc
any one of a number of uniform projections on a gear, sprocket, rack, etc, by which drive is transmitted
taste or appetite (esp in the phrase sweet tooth )
old or ageing: used originally of horses, because their gums recede with age
with ferocity and force
we fought tooth and nail
verb
(tr) to provide with a tooth or teeth
(intr) (of two gearwheels) to engage
tooth
plural
teethAny of the hard bony structures in the mouth used to grasp and chew food and as weapons of attack and defense. In mammals and many other vertebrates, the teeth are set in sockets in the jaw. In fish and amphibians, they grow in and around the palate.
See also dentition
A similar structure in certain invertebrate animals.
tooth
A hard structure, embedded in the jaws of the mouth, that functions in chewing. The tooth consists of a crown, covered with hard white enamel; a root, which anchors the tooth to the jawbone; and a “neck” between the crown and the root, covered by the gum. Most of the tooth is made up of dentin, which is located directly below the enamel. The soft interior of the tooth, the pulp, contains nerves and blood vessels. Humans have molars for grinding food, incisors for cutting, and canines and bicuspids for tearing.
Other Word Forms
- toothless adjective
- toothlike adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of tooth1
Word History and Origins
Origin of tooth1
Idioms and Phrases
by the skin of one's teeth, barely.
He got away by the skin of his teeth.
show one's teeth, to become hostile or threatening; exhibit anger.
Usually friendly, she suddenly began to show her teeth.
set / put one's teeth on edge,
to induce an unpleasant sensation.
to repel; irritate.
The noise of the machines sets my teeth on edge.
long in the tooth, old; elderly.
cast / throw in someone's teeth, to reproach someone for (an action).
History will ever throw this blunder in his teeth.
to the teeth, entirely; fully.
armed to the teeth; dressed to the teeth in furs.
cut one's teeth on, to do at the beginning of one's education, career, etc., or in one's youth.
The hunter boasted of having cut his teeth on tigers.
in the teeth of,
so as to face or confront; straight into or against.
in the teeth of the wind.
in defiance of; in opposition to.
She maintained her stand in the teeth of public opinion.
set one's teeth, to become resolute; prepare for difficulty.
He set his teeth and separated the combatants.
put teeth in / into, to establish or increase the effectiveness of.
to put teeth into the law.
More idioms and phrases containing tooth
Example Sentences
A second man, Jack Knight, has been spared jail "by the skin of your teeth".
Jimmy Carter’s appearance became more diminutive during his incumbency, but his teeth became bigger; Ronald Reagan’s face went from smiling to hollowed and ghostly.
"As a boy from Smethwick, who grew up just four miles down the road with big teeth and glasses, I couldn't believe I got a show on Radio 2," he added.
With braces on her teeth and being touted as the future of women's boxing, Ayton felt the pressure.
At the helm of a massive shiny black truck bearing the Teamsters insignia, a driver clenched a cigar between his teeth as he steered with one hand and pulled an overhead horn with the other.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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