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Example sentences for "both jaws"

  • The teeth are of the most formidable description, consisting in both jaws of serrated dental plates behind, and in front of enormous conical tusks (fig.

  • In all, the canine teeth are wanting in both jaws; and there are no incisor teeth in the lower jaw, whilst there are two incisors in the front of the upper jaw, which are developed into two huge "tusks.

  • Canine teeth are present in both jaws, and the grinding teeth have short crowns, marked by =V=-shaped ridges.

  • An extinct form, Physodon, from the Pliocene of Europe and Patagonia is allied to the Sperm whale, but has teeth in both jaws.

  • It is always a difficult problem to determine the date after which it is inadvisable to attempt reduction by manipulation in an old dislocation and no rules can be laid down which will cover all cases.

  • Radiogram of Fracture of Olecranon Process, showing marked degree of displacement.

  • The most important landmarks in the region of the wrist are the styloid processes of the radius and ulna.

  • In young subjects whose occupation entails free movement of the elbow-joint, it is sometimes advisable to expose the fracture by operation and secure the fragments in position.

  • The last molars on each side, above and below, in both jaws, will not make their appearance till you are grown up.

  • The next sort are those little pointed teeth, which come after the incisors, on each side of both jaws.

  • Dolphins and porpoises, those faithful companions of the sailor, around whose vessel they come playing and tumbling in the seas of all countries, are the only ones who have them in both jaws.

  • The tushes, perhaps, loaded with tartar in both jaws, are blunt, and generally either very short or long, inclining somewhat outward.

  • The mouth is large, with strong incisor teeth in front, and several series of molar teeth in both jaws.

  • The head is as long as the depth of the body, with a large mouth, and sharp, lancet-shaped teeth in both jaws.

  • These segments are not equal in both jaws.

  • No beak or rostrum; snout short and convex; numerous teeth in both jaws.

  • These have incisors in both jaws, which vary in number, the lower ones slanting forward.

  • As a rule there are numerous teeth in both jaws; and the pterygoid bones of the skull are short, thin and involuted to form with a process of the palate bone the outer wall of the post-palatine air-sinus.

  • This, with the frequent presence of rudimentary teeth in other species of this genus, indicates that the beaked whales are derived from ancestral forms with teeth of normal character in both jaws.

  • Teeth in both jaws and on the palatines and pterygoids.

  • The dentition of Putorius differs from that of Mustela chiefly in the absence of the anterior premolars of both jaws.

  • The first premolar in both jaws is extremely minute and often deciduous; while the upper molar is much larger than the sectorial, subquadrate, and as broad as long.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "both jaws" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    both arms; both banks; both families; both gold and silver; both here; both horse and foot; both instances; both numbers; both parents; both parties; both parts; both political; both provinces; both public and private; both senses; both shores; both small and great; both surfaces; both the; both their; both these; both together; both ways; including many; strong gale; trim them