They don't. It's actually fingernails that grow faster than toe nails.. but why.. good question..
The nails on your fingers are generally thinner and grow faster than the nails on your toes. Fingernails are also more visible as they are more exposed to daily wear and tear. Toenails tend to be thicker and grow slower due to being covered by socks and shoes most of the time.
Yes, fingernails do grow faster than toenails.
Fingernails and toenails are plates of stratified squamous epithelial cells with hard keratin that protect the distal ends of the phalanges. The phalanges are the finger bones.You are describing finger nails and toe nails. For some interesting nail facts: fingernails grow faster than toenails. The fingernails on the right hand of a right-handed person grow faster than those on their left hand.
My toenails definitely grow faster than my fingernails. I must be one of the unusual people in this world because everything I read sayd that fingernails grow faster. I know for a fact that my toenails grow faster, but I have no idea why. I wish my fingernails would grow as fast as my toenails! I don't think that toenails grow faster than fingernails, it's that toenails tend to be stronger so they don't break as easily. That's why it seems to some people that their toenails are growing faster than their fingernails; Fingernails are more susceptible to breakage because they are thinner.
On average, fingernails grow faster than toenails. Fingernails typically grow at a rate of about 3mm per month, while toenails grow at a rate of about 1mm per month. However, individual growth rates can vary.
Trick question.! Fingernails do not grow in either;
Slower than what?
Your nails should not be longer than your finger itself.
faster than your moms
Theoretically increasing bloodflow to the ends of your fingers should increase nail growth. (Within reason; once you reach a certain amount of bloodflow to your fingers, increasing it further will have very little impact upon nail growth). So tapping your fingernails may increase bloodflow, but it seems likely that you may also chip your nails doing this. Touch-typing, knitting etc... should have the same impact upon increasing bloodflow, and may also prove more productive than tapping your fingernails. (I personally find that knitting really strengthens my nails).
Than you will have purple polka dots on you finger nails.