Raffzahn

Etymology
. The word, in its first sense, is an inherited word whose oldest attested form so far is Late “incisor” that originally might have applied the probable sense “carnassial, ; tusk”. The extension to human teeth developed probably by comparison for instance with a. From 1800 onwards the word then also applied the second and third sense which semantically overlapped with the sense “snatch up” of the German verb.

Noun
Translation: 1940, Thomas Mann: Joseph in Egypt. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, page 617:
 * 1)  crooked upper incisor jutting out under the upper lip
 * 2) * 1936, Thomas Mann: Joſeph in Ägypten. Wien: Bermann-Fiſcher Verlag, page 701:
 * "de"

- Denn Tabubu, ſchwarz-nackt bis zum Gürtel, um den Kopf graue Zotteln, in welchen der Wind wühlte, gegürtet unter den Vettelbrüſten mit einem Ziegenfell (und ſo angetan war auch ihre junge Gehilfin), ſprach alles aus, was da war, mit beweglichem Klatſchmunde, worin zwei Raffzähne einſam ſtanden, und führte es marktſchreieriſch an nach Namen und Nutzung.


 * 1)  greedy bastard, puttock a person who is grabby, greedy, grasping, rapacious
 * 2)  glutton, greedyguts, greedy pig one who eats voraciously, obsessively, or to excess
 * 1)  glutton, greedyguts, greedy pig one who eats voraciously, obsessively, or to excess
 * 1)  glutton, greedyguts, greedy pig one who eats voraciously, obsessively, or to excess