Sentences with phrase «around the tooth in»

In this case, the head spins around the tooth in one direction or the other in a rotary - like movement.
First you take the toothpaste And you put it on the brush Place it in your mouth Remember there's no rush Then you move it up and down And all around your teeth In the morning and the evening And after you eat You got to brush, brush, brush, brush Brush, brush, brush your teeth Now you take your toothbrush And you move it back and forth The front teeth and the back teeth The tall ones and the short Brushing will also Help remove the plaque Along with flossing Between sharp teeth and flat You got to brush, brush, brush, brush Brush, brush, brush your teeth
This involves gently probing under the gum line in several areas around each tooth in the mouth to measure periodontal pockets, or separation of the gums from the tooth root surface.

Not exact matches

Lucy is not compelling because the skull is very clearly an primate of some sort and decidedly not human and there is an entire evolutionary step [in mankind] that is based around a computer model that began with a single tooth.
In the middle of the synod, she stopped, wheeled around, slapped a hand over his mouth, loosened his teeth, said, «Young man, don't you ever say anything like that again.
The Kingdom is that great pearl that when you find it, you sell everything else off - even your right answers - just to hold it in your hand, roll it around your teeth for the joy of the clicking sound it makes, falling into place.
Here's a hint to those who are not in the know: if there isn't an actual physical body walking around and talking and such, there can be no «wailing and gnashing of teeth» and therefore no hell.
The Kingdom is that great pearl that when you find it, you sell everything else off — even your right answers — just to hold it in your hand, roll it around your teeth for the joy of the clicking sound it makes, falling into place.
Your mother will instruct you how to score Each fleshy leaf between your teeth until You reach the inmost flimsy purple tent Tethered around the terminated thistle, Which nestles neatly in the meaty core.
It characterizes those who believe in God as being as intellectually irresponsible as someone who would believe in the tooth fairy, and structure their moral fabric around such a belief.
Here I am running around Tokyo attempting to shove ramen in my face with tooth - pick sized chopsticks and I suddenly decide to share with y ’ all a simple Greek dish.
Everyone ate in ten minutes, barely noticing the subtle nuances of my chestnut dressing, but we lingered around the table for hours, passing a bottle of whiskey, picking our teeth and just enjoying the good company.
With Easter just around the corner and my sweet tooth raging out of control, I had a hankering for a good melt in my mouth kind of cookie.
I'm in the process of building up an arsenal of raw desserts around here, so hopefully you can find a few things that satisfy your sweet tooth:)
There are several curriculum - linked activities for schoolchildren to get their teeth into, including getting children to create a chart of meat - free food according to the alphabet in order to help them with their literacy, learning about meat - free diets around the world for geography, and designing a four - week MFM diet for design and technology.
I want to speak up in favor of the regular almond milk variety, though, because it's still subtly sweet, it's got an amazing aroma and faint taste of almonds, which makes me melt, and it's not so sweet that it knocks my socks off, makes my teeth hurt, and I wander around feeling like I'm in a sugar coma.
• Fairyburger • Faith, Hope, Love, & Luck Survive Despite a Whiskered Accomplice • Family Around the Table • Fix Me a Little Lunch • For the Love of Food • Full Belly Sisters • Hezzi - D's Books and Cooks • Home Sweet Homestead • Join Us, Pull up a Chair • Kate's Recipe Box • Kelly Lynn's Sweets and Treats • Little House Big Alaska • My Southern Sweet Tooth • Our Good Life • Oven Tales By Syama • Palatable Pastime • Rants From My Crazy Kitchen • Savory Moments • Seduction in the Kitchen • Sidewalk Shoes • That Recipe • The Freshman Cook • The Mad Scientists Kitchen • The Pajama Chef • The Redhead Baker • The Saucy Southerner • The Spiffy Cookie • The Weekday Gourmet • Tramplingrose • Turnips 2 Tangerines • Uncle Jerry's Kitchen
Keith says that as he hurriedly skated to the bench, he could feel seven of his front teeth either hanging on by fibrous threads or rattling around in his mouth.
Then, secure the bacon around the jalapeno with a tooth pick, keeping everything in place.
As for Pogba and Carrick though, it goes to show how an experienced head can help improve those around him even if he isn't playing a great deal, and that could be huge in Pogba's development moving forward while Carrick cuts his teeth in coaching ahead of his retirement this summer.
The problems at Kettering are of a type with those that humbled Leeds, that bedevil Portsmouth, that are grumbling around Birmingham: distant, selfish owners, divorced from the fans, and overseen — if you can call it that — by a supine Football Association so lacking in teeth that it's been off solids longer than I've been on them.
We stopped for breakfast in Statesville, NC for about an hour, where I also got the kids out of their pajamas and washed faces / brushed teeth, and then continued on to Savannah and got there around 3 pm.
Younger than 3 — Teeth will start emerging in your child's mouth around six months, though some children don't have their first tooth until they're over a year old.
Because we swill these drinks around our mouths, every surface of our teeth gets coated in sugar.
Amazingly, your growing baby will be around 11.5 cm by week 16, and by week 20 will have tiny tooth buds in place — plus you'll now also be half way through your exciting journey!
While milk teeth begin to erupt around six months of age, your baby's mouth is busy growing even in the absence of teeth.
Waiting until all baby teeth are in around 30 months is appropriate, but most everyone agrees by age three your child should be seen by a dentist.
If your child has started teething by now, you may notice some hurdles that need to be addressed in terms of your baby's tooth and gum pain when mealtime rolls around.
The bottom two pearly whites popped through around the age of 6 months and in the past couple weeks two shiny top teeth have decided to make an appearance too.
Teething is a common frustration to many babes and parents as they grow an amazing 20 teeth in the first couple of years of life, starting around 4 to 7 months of age usually.
This usually happens around ten months, but it can be as late as a year, depending on how quickly your baby's teeth grow in.
A few notes: I have kids who never got the memo that you should sleep in when you stay up late (not that i'm bitter) so we've always had an early - ish bedtime (as early as 6 but usually around 7) and avoided evening activities, as dinner is at 5 and bedtime routines (potty, teeth, PJs, books, songs) start around 6.
Here are some of the most common reasons: Teething: You may have been through many teething stages before now, but around this age, your toddler's canine teeth will be cutting through and these can be the most painful of all and cause pain in the night causes them to wake up.
If the baby sleeps with the bottle in the mouth, the breast milk or baby formula will pool around his or her mouth and this could lead to tooth decay.
Your child should have a full set of 20 teeth by age three and these should remain in place until their permanent teeth start to grow in around age six.
By age 3, your child should have a full set of 20 baby teeth, which shouldn't fall out until his permanent teeth are ready to start coming in, around age 6.
The lower central incisors (the two front bottom teeth) that probably came in around the seven - month mark, and their top - level counterparts, the upper central incisors, which probably followed a few weeks later.
my little girl is just a little over 6 months, she can sit up on her own, we helped her learn that by putting her up with pillows around her for support, we put her on the floor every day for a half hour to an hour to help her with crawling she can get her back legs up she just cant get them moving together, she eats everything she can get her hands on but shes been going back and forth on her teeth, she drools and chews on her hands but hasn't gotten any broken in yet.
Most babies get their first tooth around 6 months old, though there's a wide range in when those first tiny pearly whites make their appearance.
In fact the number of teeth required and jaw movements necessary to process various textures do not really develop until sometime around and after 24 months to 30 months of age.
While children with prolonged and constant sucking habits (whether on a finger or a pacifier) may have problems with their upper front teeth coming in properly, pediatric dentists suggest that for most children pacifier use won't cause any dental problems until the permanent teeth come in — usually around age 4 to 6.
Around baby's first birthday, he may get his first molars in the back of his mouth, and then come the canines (the pointed teeth between the molars and the incisors).
However, the first tooth is usually lost around age 6 and some primary molars must remain in place until 12 or 13 years of age.
· Breastfeeding does not allow milk to pool in the baby's mouth around the child's teeth.
Grinding can occur at any age, but it's most common in babies who are getting their first teeth (usually around 6 months).
Until around preschool, and strongly dependent on the child, the child may not be able to follow multiple steps or a complex step, such as «get ready for bed» which contains «wash your face, then brush your teeth, then comb your hair, then put on jammies and get in bed.»
Those last teeth come in, you guessed it, somewhere around your little one's second birthday.
By age 3, your child should have a full set of 20 baby teeth, and they shouldn't start to fall out until his permanent teeth are ready to start coming in (around age 6).
The bigger concern is permanent teeth, which start coming in around age 4 to 6.
I have nursed 4 children nights — 3 of them nursed till almost 5 and the fourth is now 2 1/2 and they did naturally extend their number of hours of uninterrupted sleep on their own over time with maturity, reaching a «full» night (sometimes) around 3 or 4... But with teeth... I don't know the «research», and I guess theoretically the sugar in the milk would encourage cavities.
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