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5 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
tooth
/ˈtuθ/
牙齒,齒狀物,嗜好(vt.)裝以齒,咬,將…切成齒狀(vi.)齧合
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Tooth
v. t.
[
imp. &
p
. p.
Toothed
p.
pr
. &
vb
. n.
Toothing
.]
1.
To
furnish
with
teeth
.
The
twin
cards
toothed
with
glittering
wire
.
--
Wordsworth
.
2.
To
indent
;
to
jag
;
as
,
to
tooth
a
saw
.
3.
To
lock
into
each
other
.
See
Tooth
,
n.
, 4.
◄
►
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Tooth
n.
;
pl
.
Teeth
1.
Anat.
One
of
the
hard
,
bony
appendages
which
are
borne
on
the
jaws
,
or
on
other
bones
in
the
walls
of
the
mouth
or
pharynx
of
most
vertebrates
,
and
which
usually
aid
in
the
prehension
and
mastication
of
food
.
Note:
☞
The
hard
parts
of
teeth
are
principally
made
up
of
dentine
,
or
ivory
,
and
a
very
hard
substance
called
enamel
.
These
are
variously
combined
in
different
animals
.
Each
tooth
consist
of
three
parts
,
a
crown
,
or
body
,
projecting
above
the
gum
,
one
or
more
fangs
imbedded
in
the
jaw
,
and
the
neck
,
or
intermediate
part
.
In
some
animals
one
or
more
of
the
teeth
are
modified
into
tusks
which
project
from
the
mouth
,
as
in
both
sexes
of
the
elephant
and
of
the
walrus
,
and
in
the
male
narwhal
.
In
adult
man
there
are
thirty-two
teeth
,
composed
largely
of
dentine
,
but
the
crowns
are
covered
with
enamel
,
and
the
fangs
with
a
layer
of
bone
called
cementum
.
Of
the
eight
teeth
on
each
half
of
each
jaw
,
the
two
in
front
are
incisors
,
then
come
one
canine
,
cuspid
,
or
dog
tooth
,
two
bicuspids
,
or
false
molars
,
and
three
molars
,
or
grinding
teeth
.
The
milk
,
or
temporary
,
teeth
are
only
twenty
in
number
,
there
being
two
incisors
,
one
canine
,
and
two
molars
on
each
half
of
each
jaw
.
The
last
molars
,
or
wisdom
teeth
,
usually
appear
long
after
the
others
,
and
occasionally
do
not
appear
above
the
jaw
at
all
.
How
sharper
than
a
serpent's
tooth
it
is
To
have
a
thankless
child
! --
Shak
.
2.
Fig
.:
Taste
;
palate
.
These
are
not
dishes
for
thy
dainty
tooth
.
--
Dryden
.
3.
Any
projection
corresponding
to
the
tooth
of
an
animal
,
in
shape
,
position
,
or
office
;
as
,
the
teeth
,
or
cogs
,
of
a
cogwheel
;
a
tooth
,
prong
,
or
tine
,
of
a
fork
;
a
tooth
,
or
the
teeth
,
of
a
rake
,
a
saw
,
a
file
,
a
card
.
4.
(a)
A
projecting
member
resembling
a
tenon
,
but
fitting
into
a
mortise
that
is
only
sunk
,
not
pierced
through
.
(b)
One
of
several
steps
,
or
offsets
,
in
a
tusk
.
See
Tusk
.
5.
Nat. Hist.
An
angular
or
prominence
on
any
edge
;
as
,
a
tooth
on
the
scale
of
a
fish
,
or
on
a
leaf
of
a
plant
;
specifically
Bot.
,
one
of
the
appendages
at
the
mouth
of
the
capsule
of
a
moss
.
See
Peristome
.
6.
Zool.
Any
hard
calcareous
or
chitinous
organ
found
in
the
mouth
of
various
invertebrates
and
used
in
feeding
or
procuring
food
;
as
,
the
teeth
of
a
mollusk
or
a
starfish
.
In spite of the teeth
,
in
defiance
of
opposition
;
in
opposition
to
every
effort
.
In the teeth
,
directly
;
in
direct
opposition
;
in
front
.
“Nor
strive
with
all
the
tempest
in
my
teeth
.”
--
Pope
.
To cast in the teeth
,
to
report
reproachfully
;
to
taunt
or
insult
one
with
.
Tooth and nail
,
as
if
by
biting
and
scratching
;
with
one's
utmost
power
;
by
all
possible
means
. --
L'Estrange
.
“I
shall
fight
tooth
and
nail
for
international
copyright.”
--
Charles
Reade
.
Tooth coralline
Zool.
,
any
sertularian
hydroid
.
Tooth edge
,
the
sensation
excited
in
the
teeth
by
grating
sounds
,
and
by
the
touch
of
certain
substances
,
as
keen
acids
.
Tooth key
,
an
instrument
used
to
extract
teeth
by
a
motion
resembling
that
of
turning
a
key
.
Tooth net
,
a
large
fishing
net
anchored
. [
Scot
.] --
Jamieson
.
Tooth ornament
.
Arch.
Same
as
Dogtooth
,
n.
, 2.
Tooth powder
,
a
powder
for
cleaning
the
teeth
;
a
dentifrice
.
Tooth rash
.
Med.
See
Red-gum
, 1.
To show the teeth
,
to
threaten
.
“When
the
Law
shows
her
teeth
,
but
dares
not
bite.”
--
Young
.
To the teeth
,
in
open
opposition
;
directly
to
one's
face
.
“That
I
shall
live
,
and
tell
him
to
his
teeth
.”
--
Shak
.
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
tooth
n
1:
hard
bonelike
structures
in
the
jaws
of
vertebrates
;
used
for
biting
and
chewing
or
for
attack
and
defense
2:
something
resembling
the
tooth
of
an
animal
3:
toothlike
structure
in
invertebrates
found
in
the
mouth
or
alimentary
canal
or
on
a
shell
4:
a
means
of
enforcement
; "
the
treaty
had
no
teeth
in
it
"
5:
one
of
a
number
of
uniform
projections
on
a
gear
[
also
:
teeth
(
pl
)]
From:
Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary
Tooth
one
of
the
particulars
regarding
which
retaliatory
punishment
was
to
be
inflicted
(
Ex
. 21:24;
Lev
. 24:20;
Deut
. 19:21).
"
Gnashing
of
teeth
" =
rage
,
despair
(
Matt
. 8:12;
Acts
7:54);
"
cleanness
of
teeth
" =
famine
(
Amos
4:6); "
children's
teeth
set
on
edge
" =
children
suffering
for
the
sins
of
their
fathers
(
Ezek
. 18:2).
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