Her skull is sloped back to a basal serration almost buried in neck and jaw muscles.
From the en.wikipedia.org
To be sure, outrage comes in many forms, flavors and degrees of serration.
From the sfgate.com
He even uses an electron microscope to view different serration designs of shark teeth.
From the sciencedaily.com
It is very slightly smaller than the five-cent piece, but is much thicker, and has a coarse serration around the edge.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Its edge has a fine, continuous serration which is embossed with stars and letters differing between nations.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Serration densities possess a strong similarity between the Great White and makos, where the serration densities between the Great White and megalodon exhibit sharp differences.
From the sciencedaily.com
More examples
The condition of being serrated; "the serrations of a city skyline"
A row of notches; "the pliers had serrations to improve the grip"
(serrated) serrate: notched like a saw with teeth pointing toward the apex
(serrated) saw-like; Having a row of sharp or tooth-like projections
(serrations) bumps, barbs, corrugations, or other features that increase the holding power of the device.
(Serrations) Consecutive small teeth or barbs on the edge of a blade formed by removing pressure flakes. Biface serrations have flakes removed from both sides of the blade edge while uniface serrations have flakes removed from only one face of an edge.
(Serrations) Roughness along the edges of an ink line seen under a microscope. Set The width of an individual typewritten letter.
(Serrations) The horizontal timing pulses that appear as positive-going notches in the negative-going vertical sync pulse in some timing signals. ...
(Serrations) nicks or notches chipped into the edge of a blade, presumably to increase its efficiency as a knife or saw. Serrations range from fine-toothed to deep and jagged.