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incisors

n. (plural of incisor English)

Usage examples of "incisors".

For a brief moment his lips drew back in a silent snarl, and he felt his incisors lengthen in hunger.

His lengthened incisors were exposed, and when the door opened just a crack, the dim light from the hall turned his eyes a fiery bloodred.

He bent closer, his incisors lengthening as he neared the pulse beating strongly in the neck.

He felt his incisors lengthening, and he turned his head away from the temptation of her soft skin, vulnerable and exposed to him.

Byron showed his gleaming white teeth, his incisors slightly prominent as if he could take a bite out of his nephew.

Byron knew he was on the edge of control, his incisors already lengthening, so he had to be careful as he suckled and teased her nipples into hard peaks.

They had ratlike incisors, and a humble verminous look compared to Noth and his family, their black-and-white fur patchy and filthy.

But the rodents, with their ferocious, ever-growing incisors, could break through the toughest nut and grain seed coats.

Capo had large incisors for biting, necessary for fruit, whereas his molars were small.

They had side teeth like shears that could slice through skin, rip it aside, and get inside a body, where their incisors could nibble at the flesh.

Its incisors had developed into ferocious slashing weapons, to be deployed by thrusts of the heavy head.

On the tundra the predatory rats had grown their incisors into huge stabbing instruments, the better to penetrate those thick layers of fur and fat.

He started to walk stumblingly to some quieter part of the plaza, but she caught his wrist again and grinned a tiger-grin, all incisors and tongue.

She pulled out one of her own front incisors, the roots of the pointed tooth bright crimson.

Or the high roller with the low forehead and diamond-embedded incisors who tipped everyone in the place, including the next couple, one hundred dollars each.