shove it in your mouth chew it, and if you dont chew it, hope to live :|
They grind the food between their teeth when they chew. So the lower jaw goes to one side and closes then moves side ways to grind and tear the food.
If you move your mouth from side-to-side, when you are chewing fun, it promotes the chance of you biting your mouth. Though if you don't, then it helps train you to keep your mouth chewing in one place. So it does help you not bite your mouth if you don't chew randomly or up-and-down.
No one online is going to be able to tell you how long something on YOUR body will heal! Healing speed depends on your age and your overall general health. Regarding when its safe to chew on that side of your mouth again, I would say when the wound has fully healed. You don't want food to get into the wound and infect it. ~ T
He bit something that cut the one side of the mouth.
Cows, and any animals that chew cud (ruminants), have a four chambered stomach. Horses do not chew cud and only have a one-chambered stomach. (pseudo-ruminant monogastrics.)
Molars are teeth that are in the back of the mouth. They help one chew food. Other teeth found in the mouth are incisors, canine, and premolars.
because cows have 4 stomachs, their food goes into one, comes back up into their mouth, then goes into their 2nd stomach, and so on. all because their food (grass) is so hard to digest!
The mandible is the lower jaw. The one that moves up and down when you open and close your mouth or chew. It is useful because it supports the lower teeth and lets us chew food.
by opening your mouth as far as you can then let your tongue kill it while u chew it then swallow
Untwist it or pull from one side then the other.
Because the law says if they have a cloven hoof AND chew the cud (ruminate) they are permitted to eat it. If they have only one of those traits then they aren't permitted to eat it. A pig has a cloven hoof but doesn't chew the cud!