i guess you could say horses do! i ride horses and ive seen their teeth before and they are very similiar to ours in a way, they have molors at the back and they are very similiar shape to ours but bigger
No in bears only have one row of teeth where as sharks have hundreds also the common bear's teeth are bigger then a sharks but a shark has sharper teeth :)
I think it would be crocodile teeth
Not in humans. Some animals and fish can regenerate their teeth.
Humans
Yes, the tiger's teeth are similar to the lions.
For the same reason as humans. Teeth are essential for the mastication (chewing) stage of digestion. Teeth can also be used as a defence mechanism for many animals.
In comparison to those of humans or smaller animals, yes.
A bull shark can have up to fifty rows of teeth. When teeth fall out, they are replaced with new ones, similar to how humans lose their baby teeth.
Koala Bears have fingerprints that are almost identical to humans.
Dissecting real animals is important because certain animals have similar charcteristics to humans. They can help with medical procedures and you can test on animals instead of humans.
Humans and animals do have some similar basic learning capabilities. However, a person has processing abilities in their brains that animals do not have.
humans are similar together by their feelings and by their cultures and they all have humanity and good luck!
Dissecting real animals is important because certain animals have similar charcteristics to humans. They can help with medical procedures and you can test on animals instead of humans.