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One who's down in the mouth?
Answer for the clue "One who's down in the mouth? ", 7 letters:
dentist
Alternative clues for the word dentist
Word definitions for dentist in dictionaries
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Dentist \Den"tist\, n. [From L. dens, dentis, tooth: cf. F. dentiste. See Tooth .] One whose business it is to clean, extract, or repair natural teeth, and to make and insert artificial ones; a dental surgeon.
Usage examples of dentist.
After the failure of Dentist and the fumbling of Baseplate, he decides to migrate with the Visigoths.
Another accident occurred when Flossie Devine, in a Dancing Trout station wagon late at night on her way back from a Capital City dentist, swerved to avoid a mammoth tumbleweed loping across the highway and wound up in a ditch with her new bridgework in her lap.
They also talk about no tipping, no jukeboxes and no carhops and that they have dentists, salesmen, farmers and veterinarians running their units.
I repeated the same conversation, with variations, in my chats with the three remaining dentists.
But I happen to be a dentist, like my friend who left me his collection, and Gobbo made an appointment for an extraction.
The psychic dentist had told me all about transcendental maxillofacial extractile vibrations, and the time travel guy had showed me a hand-lettered chart showing how the partial load setting affected future events.
He recommended that a forensic odontologist, or dentist, review the photographs.
Dolson here is not a forensic odontologist, forensic anthropologist, forensic pathologist, or a dentist, is she?
He is one of our odontologists, or forensic dentists, whose bad luck it is to be on call Christmas Eve.
The daughter of a dentist, Williams, who was briefly married to a football star back home, had always been an overachiever until moving to New York in 1987 to pursue an acting career.
Morton for not having gone to see the dentist and threatening him with gumboils, pyorrhoea, septic poisoning, indigestion and a complete set of false teeth if he persisted in behaving like a baby.
My semiannual visit to the dentist is as masochistic as I care to get.
He placed me in the hands of a skilful surgeon, who was at the same time a dentist.
Its urgent wail has changed from earlier days, when the drill resembled a giant cranefly, held firm in the mouth of its prey by an acolyte dentist till its appetite for pain was sated.
I am particularly afraid of strange dentists, so before I went into the RAF I made sure my teeth were in order.