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Premolar

A premolar is a cheek tooth positioned between the canine region and the molars.

Premolars may vary in shape and function across animals and should be interpreted within the full dentition.

Premolars help students understand that teeth are not all one type. Cheek teeth may support cutting, crushing, shearing, or grinding depending on form and context.

Ask:

  • Where is the tooth located in the tooth row?
  • Is the surface sharp, pointed, ridged, or broad?
  • How does it compare with molars?
  • What does the full dentition suggest?

Ask students to compare premolars and molars and describe what changes from front to back in the cheek tooth row.

Public sources will be added as this entry is reviewed and expanded.

This entry explains tooth terminology for public education. It does not provide identification, handling, preparation, or biological material processing guidance.