One animal that chews its food with its legs is the horseshoe crab. It does not have teeth or jaws, so it uses its legs to "chew" the food, which then goes into its beak.
wood with air
yes...yes they are
Animal hooves and sinew were used a lot. Now they are used in very limited amounts for specialist wood glue for restoration.
take thing like maybe a newspaper and roll it up and every time he chews up a something pop him/her softy to train him/her
A Cow
an anemone
a match is wood, wood leads to splinters...... yes it's harmful!
One animal that chews its food with its legs is the horseshoe crab. It does not have teeth or jaws, so it uses its legs to "chew" the food, which then goes into its beak.
This is because if the rabbit chews some wood that isn't good for them, then--BAM--- bye,bye Rabbit!
A termite is an insect which eats wood and may infest homes. The insect in question numbers among the members of the Isopterainfraorder and seeks for food sources animal dung, leaf litter, and wood on the ground and elsewhere, inside and outdoors.
ruminant
No, it chews the wood to brush its teeth, as such. The splinters of wood almost act as the head of your toothbrush. When it bites down, the splinters scrape its teeth, cleaning them.
get a gnawing block vailable at all small animal shops
The potter wasp uses mud The European wasp ( USA yellow jacket ? ) chews wood The carpenter bee drills a horizontal hole in wood.
(He/she) chews = mastica, masca (he/she) chews (thinks) = rumia, medita
Just like pretty much any other animal, It opens the mouth, chews a little, then swallows.