Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Finally its dead teeth got up and crawled out of its mouth in different directions.
A certain percentage of people are sensitive to toxins that are manufactured within these dead teeth.
He has a dead tooth, Reber thought.
"Dead Tooth" received mixed reviews from critics.
That is at least the general viewpoint of the dental profession, and not every dentist would agree that a dead tooth must be treated.
It was a dead tooth so you could not tell how long it had been out, only that it matched his dentist's charts.
Like an abscess at the base of a dead tooth, a private business had somehow managed to establish itself in the cellar of the public building.
The tenements that reared up, vacant and gray as vast dead teeth, were too numerous and too tall.
No statistics are known but it is possible to have a trouble-free tooth after irreversible pulpitis, albeit a dead tooth.
Dental xrays showed a dead tooth, and a root canal was done on the spot, since there was no dentist at the South Pole.
"Dead Tooth" is the second episode of the first season of the Fox sitcom Raising Hope.
And I'll give you a hint: It involves my cousin Timitar Berbatov's dead tooth.
Although teeth may hurt terribly, most severe tooth infections simply result either in a dead tooth, or a tooth that falls out and are rarely life-threatening.
Without the glottal stop the term "nifooti" means "dead tooth" or "dead horn," and could not be misconstrued to mean "tooth of death."
It ate, and then something squashed it and went on, leaving it squashed with its dead teeth sunk into what it had wanted to eat.
Now and then the wind picked up a skull and hurled it, dead teeth grinning in a great silent shout that might have been of fear or exaltation.
In dentistry, ethyl chloride is used as one of the means of diagnosing a 'dead tooth', i.e. one in which the pulp has died.
Shelly remarks that she got her dead tooth fixed after seeing a character with one on It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia made her no longer feel unique.
As Mr. Sajjad sat on a small stool on a pedestrian footbridge over a set of railway tracks, Mr. Jameel pried out brown chunks of dead tooth and flicked them onto the red plastic tarp spread out under the stool.
One common claim is that the word "nifo'oti" means "tooth of death" but this is not linguistically accurate as Samoan syntax places the modifier after the subject; according to Samoan grammar the term "nifo'oti" would actually mean "dead tooth," hardly as intimidating as the former translation.