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In some parts of India, young children offer their discarded baby teeth to the sun, sometimes wrapped in a tiny rag of cotton turf[clarification needed].
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Various cultures have customs relating to the loss of deciduous teeth. In English-speaking countries, the tooth fairy is a popular childhood fiction that a fairy
rewards children when their baby teeth fall out. Children typically
place a tooth under their pillow at night. The fairy is said to take the
tooth and replace it with money or small gifts while they sleep. In
some places in Australia, Sweden and Norway,
the children put the tooth in a glass of water. In medieval Scandinavia
there was a similar tradition, surviving to the present day in Iceland,
of tannfé ('tooth-money'), a gift to a child when it cuts its first tooth.[3]
Other traditions are associated with mice or other rodents because of
their sharp, everlasting teeth. The character Ratón Pérez appears in
the tale of The Vain Little Mouse. A Ratoncito Pérez was used by Colgate in marketing toothpaste in Venezuela[4] and Spain[citation needed]. In Italy, the Tooth Fairy (Fatina) is also often replaced by a small mouse (topino). In France and in French-speaking Belgium, this character is called la petite souris ("The Little Mouse"). From parts of lowland Scotland comes a tradition similar to the fairy mouse: a white fairy rat who purchases the teeth with coins.
Several traditions concern throwing the shed teeth. In Turkey, Cyprus, Mexico, and Greece,
children traditionally throw their fallen "milk teeth" onto the roof of
their house while making a wish. Similarly, in some Asian countries,
such as India, Korea, Nepal, Philippines, and the Vietnam,
when a child loses a tooth, the usual custom is that he or she should
throw it onto the roof if it came from the lower jaw, or into the space
beneath the floor if it came from the upper jaw. While doing this, the
child shouts a request for the tooth to be replaced with the tooth of a
mouse. This tradition is based on the fact that the teeth of mice grow
for their entire lives, a characteristic of all rodents.
In some parts of India, young children offer their discarded baby teeth to the sun, sometimes wrapped in a tiny rag of cotton turf[clarification needed].
In Japan,
a different variation calls for lost upper teeth to be thrown straight
down to the ground and lower teeth straight up into the air; the idea is
that incoming teeth will grow in straight.[citation needed]
The Sri Lankan tradition is to throw the milk teeth onto the roof or a tree in the presence of a squirrel (Funambulus palmarum). The child then tells the squirrel to take the old tooth in return for a new one. Some parts of China
follow a similar tradition by throwing the teeth from the lower jaw
onto the roof and burying the teeth from the upper jaw underground, as a
symbol of urging the permanent teeth to grow faster towards the right
direction.
The tradition of throwing a baby tooth up into the sky to the sun or to Allah and asking for a better tooth to replace it is common in Middle Eastern countries (including Iraq, Jordan, Egypt and Sudan). It may originate in a pre-Islamic offering and certainly dates back to at least the 13th century, when Izz bin Hibat Allah Al Hadid mentions it.[5]
In premodern Britain, lost teeth were commonly burnt to destroy them. This was partly for religious reasons connected with the Last Judgement and partly for fear of what might happen if an animal got them. A rhyme might be said as a blessing:[6]
Old tooth, new tooth
Pray God send me a new tooth
Pray God send me a new tooth
...wiki
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