The age, in beasts of burden,[1] is indicated by the teeth. In
the horse they are forty in number. At thirty months it
loses the two fore-teeth in either jaw, and in the following year
the same number next to them, at the time that the eye-teeth[2]
come. At the beginning of the fifth year the animal loses two
teeth, which grow again in the sixth, and in the seventh it has
all its teeth, those which have replaced the others, and those
which have never been changed. If a horse is gelded[3] before
it changes its teeth, it never sheds them. In a similar manner,
also, the ass loses four of its teeth in the thirtieth month, and
the others from six months to six months. If a she-ass happens not to have foaled before the last of these teeth are shed,
it is sure to be barren.[4] Oxen change their teeth at two years
old: with swine they are never changed.[5],When these
several indications of age have been lost in horses and other
beasts of burden, the age is ascertained by the projecting of
the teeth, the greyness of the hair in the eyebrows, and the
hollow pits that form around them; at this period the animal
is supposed to be about sixteen[6] years old. In the human
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