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  2. Diphyodont - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diphyodont

    A diphyodont is any animal with two sets of teeth, initially the deciduous set and consecutively the permanent set. [1] [2] [3] Most mammals are diphyodonts—as to chew their food they need a strong, durable and complete set of teeth. Diphyodonts contrast with polyphyodonts, whose teeth are constantly replaced.

  3. List of Mars Inc. brands - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Mars_Inc._brands

    Acana; ADVANCE (Australia and New Zealand only) API; Aquarian; Aquariam Pharmaceuticals; Buckeye Nutrition; Catisfactions; Cesar Canine Cuisine; Chappi; Crave

  4. Maltesers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maltesers

    Maltesers are a British confectionery product ... advertisements claimed that the Maltesers malted milk centre is one-seventh as fattening as ordinary chocolate ...

  5. Chewing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chewing

    Chewing, needing specialized teeth, is mostly a mammalian adaptation that appeared in early Synapsids, though some later herbivorous dinosaurs, since extinct, had developed chewing too. Nowadays, only mammals chew in the strict sense of the word, though some fishes have a somewhat similar behavior.

  6. Malt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malt

    A "maltings" is typically a long, single-storey building with a floor that slopes slightly from one end of the building to the other. Floor maltings began to be phased out in the 1940s in favor of "pneumatic plants", where large industrial fans are used to blow air through the germinating grain beds and to pass hot air through the malt being ...

  7. List of confectionery brands - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_confectionery_brands

    In some cases, chocolate confections (confections made of chocolate) are treated as a separate category, as are sugar-free versions of sugar confections. [1] The words candy (US and Canada), sweets (UK and Ireland), and lollies (Australia and New Zealand) are common words for the most common varieties of sugar confectionery .

  8. Human–animal hybrid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humananimal_hybrid

    Technically, in a humananimal hybrid, each cell has both human and non-human genetic material. It is in contrast to an individual where some cells are human and some are derived from a different organism, called a human-animal chimera. [1] (A human chimera, on the other hand, consists only of human cells, from different zygotes.)

  9. Canine tooth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canine_tooth

    Animals where this occurs include antelopes, musk-deer, camels, horses, wild boar, some apes, seals, narwhal, and walrus. [6] Male dogs have larger canines with different contour than do females. [7] Humans have the proportionately smallest male canine teeth among all anthropoids and exhibit relatively little sexual dimorphism in canine tooth size.