I recently came across the term "uppers" meaning "the upper teeth". A sentence like "John punched the attacker so hard that he lost two of his uppers" seems natural to me but I don't know the proper term for the lower teeth - the term "lowers" doesn't sound quite right to me. But I'm not a native. ;-)
Thanks in advance for your answers.
" Both "uppers" and "lowers" are a bit on the creative side here, you know.
New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.
They are indeed the upper and lower teeth, and I agree that "uppers" seems somehow better than "lowers", but I think that if you make it clear where the punch landed, you will be OK: "John punched the attacker in the mouth so hard that he lost two of his lowers." Both "uppers" and "lowers" are a bit on the creative side here, you know.
PastsimpleI recently came across the term "uppers" meaning "the upper teeth".
This is not used by or familiar to all English speakers.
Pastsimple"the upper teeth".
This is familiar and common.