Job 4:10
The roaring of the lion, and the voice of the fierce lion, and the teeth of the young lions, are broken.
Cross-reference
In Job 38:39, God questions Job about providing for lions — contrasting Eliphaz's claim that lions' teeth are broken and they perish for lack of prey.
In Job 29:17, Job says he broke the jaws of the wicked, using similar imagery of breaking teeth/jaws as in Job 4:10, but from a different perspective.
In Psalm 3:7, the psalmist asks God to break the teeth of the ungodly, directly parallel to the broken teeth of young lions in Job 4:10.
In Psalm 58:6, the psalmist prays to break the teeth of young lions, an almost identical phrase to Job 4:10, making a strong parallel.
Psalm 34:10 also notes that young lions suffer hunger — reinforcing Eliphaz's point but then offering a spiritual contrast.
Jeremiah 51:38 depicts lions roaring in strength — while Job 4:10 says their roaring is broken, showing opposite fates.
Lamentations 3:16 uses the same image of broken teeth — a metaphor for being crushed by affliction.