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tooth (n.)

Old English toð (plural teð), from Proto-Germanic *tanthu- (source also of Old Saxon, Danish, Swedish, Dutch tand, Old Norse tönn, Old Frisian toth, Old High German zand, German Zahn, Gothic tunþus), from PIE root *dent- "tooth." Plural teeth is an instance of i-mutation.

The loss of -n- before spirants is regular in Old English, Old Frisian, and Old Saxon: compare goose (n.), five, mouth (n.). Also thought, from stem of think; couth from the stem of can (v.1); us from *uns.

Application to tooth-like parts of other objects (saws, combs, etc.) first recorded 1520s. Tooth and nail as weapons is from 1530s. The tooth-fairy is attested from 1964.

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Definitions of tooth from WordNet

tooth (n.)
hard bonelike structures in the jaws of vertebrates; used for biting and chewing or for attack and defense;
tooth (n.)
something resembling the tooth of an animal;
tooth (n.)
toothlike structure in invertebrates found in the mouth or alimentary canal or on a shell;
tooth (n.)
a means of enforcement;
the treaty had no teeth in it
tooth (n.)
one of a number of uniform projections on a gear;
From wordnet.princeton.edu