English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

2007-04-05 16:17:43 · 21 answers · asked by Mari§§a 4 in Entertainment & Music Polls & Surveys

21 answers

Are you Mac the knife?

2007-04-05 16:22:18 · answer #1 · answered by Porcelain Doll 6 · 1 0

properly, i'm wager it truly is because of the fact earlier you detect them washed up on the coastline they have been buried for a on an identical time as. And once you dig down into sand on the coastline the authentic layer is standard and then under that it truly is all dark finding from all the microbes employing up the oxygen and then switching to oxygen-much less metabolism which isn't as effective. So the tooth get stained via the dark layer. i don't recognize if putting them in peroxide could turn them white or could wreck them.

2016-10-02 06:13:22 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

the shark goes through lots of teeth in its life.

2007-04-05 16:22:04 · answer #3 · answered by vivid_dream6703 2 · 0 0

Time to pass the pipe on to the next person in line!

2007-04-05 16:22:19 · answer #4 · answered by Mr. Bigglesworth 4 · 1 0

So they do and Porcupines are rodents with a coat of sharp spines, or quills, that defends them from predators~

2007-04-05 16:24:20 · answer #5 · answered by Psychotic2 6 · 0 0

Yes, just look at Bruce from "Finding Nemo"

2007-04-05 16:23:17 · answer #6 · answered by I<3Pink 4 · 0 0

Many teeth, they have 2 rows...OUCH!

2007-04-05 16:23:23 · answer #7 · answered by Misty M 4 · 0 0

dear and he keeps them pearly white

Bobby Darin, where are you?
Somewhere by the Sea?

2007-04-05 16:22:16 · answer #8 · answered by diannegoodwin@sbcglobal.net 7 · 1 0

...and he keeps them pearly white. Just a jack knife has old MacHeath, dear, and he keeps it out of sight...

2007-04-05 16:24:04 · answer #9 · answered by pat z 7 · 0 0

yes it does

2007-04-05 16:21:31 · answer #10 · answered by ♪JOKER♪ 6 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers