Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
There is an especially long diastema between the front and cheek teeth.
Cheek teeth have four roots on both the upper and lower jaws.
Most diatomyids have cheek teeth with four roots except for p4.
The cheek teeth toward the back of the jaw are wide and have several cusps.
Its characteristics include large cheek teeth and a sagittal crest.
It had cheek teeth specially adapted to chewing on vegetation.
Remains consist of a solitary molar and one cheek tooth.
There is a general reduction in the number of marginal teeth and cheek teeth.
These are characterized by determinant growth and occlusal features of the cheek teeth.
The classification with Echimyidae is supported by similarities in the cheek teeth structure.
It had a bony secondary palate and double-rooted cheek teeth.
Incisors are sharp and long, separated from the cheek teeth by a diastema.
Like all dasyurids, the devil has prominent canines and cheek teeth.
There is a large gap, or diastema, separating the cheek teeth from the incisors.
The cheek teeth are robust and spade-shaped with several cusps on their surfaces.
They have high crowned and rooted cheek teeth.
Incisors 1 pair and peg like, cheek teeth brad.
Due to the fact that their face is so wide P. boisei also featured enormous cheek teeth, four times the size of modern humans.
The "normal teeth" include the anterior, canine and cheek teeth.
The canine teeth are big, and there are usually about 10 cheek teeth present.
The cheek teeth were rather small.
The cheek teeth (molars and premolars) became larger and more specialised.
Their response in geologic time is to evolve cheek teeth with large crowns (hypsodonty).
Mesocarnivore cheek teeth are heterodont and their different shapes reflect distinct functions.
Some of these fossils had significantly larger cheek teeth than living animals, although they have not been assigned to a distinct subspecies.