Incisor in a sentence as a noun

It's kind of like pulling an incisor, and not like at all like cutting off their entire beak.

My problems seem to stem from when I was a toddler and cracked a baby incisor on a step.

Cattle lack upper incisors, as do deer and antelope.

He apparently had a dead incisor tooth, which had turned bluegrey.

Typical carnivore incisors I think - check out lions, tigers and other cats as well as dogs.

Keep in mind that you still have incisors and canines specifically for eating meat.

I've been using this[1] and it got rid of my persistent "plaque wall" on lower incisors within ~month.

It’s a small piece of acrylic that sits on my upper front teeth and has a sort of “shelf” that my lower incisors rest on.

True, but the stuff on my molars feels similar to the stuff on my incisors after skipping brushing for a few days.

For too long this country has been suffering a great moral and oral decay, in spirit and incisors.

Your incisors are laughably small and dull compared to those of a literal mouse and you have fewer of them than a cow does.

""My toothgrowologist has grown me a tooth, and it turned out a premolar instead of an incisor.

It understands forward-facing eyes, large ears, and sharp incisors.

The crowns on my incisors are substantially stronger and more resistant to drills than the natural teeth they replaced.

Grabbing a few soil samples might be ok if you're thinking pollen, but rather less so if a single tiny rat incisor might tell you so much.

Is it just me or does it really look like an incisor?I wonder if similar physical principles are at work in making their appearance similar.

It's evidently of genetic origin in my case, as I have relatives who are missing the same teeth, which I think from that source are called the upper lateral incisors.

Many herbivores have overdeveloped incisors that are used for defense such as an elephant's tusksHerbivores tend to use premolars and molars to grind and crush vegetation.

Incisor definitions

noun

a tooth for cutting or gnawing; located in the front of the mouth in both jaws