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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a teeth" is not correct in written English.
The correct form would be "a tooth" when referring to a single unit, as "teeth" is the plural form.
Example: "I have a toothache that is bothering me."
Alternatives: "a single tooth" or "one tooth."
Exact(20)
And your dentist can't produce and inventory a teeth cleaning.
I am a teeth grinder with a tight jaw.
A few years later, I was in Paris and was due for a teeth cleaning.
Then there is Election Day, which generally creates a level of festivity on par with, say, a teeth cleaning.
It's a kick in a teeth because the way we played wasn't good enough".
The contention of the rats was performed by a teeth bar, while the animals were under anaesthesia.
Similar(40)
Every 3,000 miles, when it was time to change the oil, I scheduled a teeth-cleaning.
The children's author Enid Blyton was a near neighbour, and wrote a teeth-rottingly sweet booklet, The Enchanted Village: "Mary cries out in joy 'It might be Fairyland!
When an outside choreographer comes in and makes a teeth-gnasher on the dancers, they remember how to do that kind of thing.
It is a teeth-gnawingly tense moment, because by swaggering but then sneaking around in an apparently empty house, Steve has suddenly put himself in the wrong.
They need to be given an idea of what kind of experience they'll have, whether it's a pleasantly diverting easy listen or a teeth-grindingly tough mental workout.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com