Only if the kitten actually has rabies and you receive a bite or a scratch from it. Any animal or human with rabies is capable of transferring it to another living being.
Only if that kitten was infected with rabies. (exception: if that kitten was a carrier of rabies, meaning it had it but didn't show symptoms of the disease.)
Yes; it is very unlikely, but any cat can carry rabies. Your kitten may have become infected if his mother became infected before he was born, or if he was bitten by an infected animal after he was born.
Almost non existent. Take the kitten in to see your Veterinarian and have it checked out. Ask your Vet about this.
There are no specific weight qualifications for a kitten to receive a rabies shot. All cats, regardless or weight, breed, or age, are given the same vaccination dose.
No, hydrophobia (literally: fear of water) is another word for Rabies.
it starts singing random one hit wonders from the 80's.
It is the best policy to always tell the truth. Just tell your friends that you didn't get the kitten and give them the reason why. It is no one's business when you get the kitten, but your own.
You can't tell if they will be fluffy or not. As the kitten gets older it will get easier to tell if the kitten is longhaired or shorthaired, but in very young kittens it is very difficult to tell.
In the first place, you cannot get rabies from a kitten unless it has rabies. If it is healthy, you have nothing to worry about. In the second place, it is very unlikely bacteria would have survived the trip from the kitten's tongue to its fur to your hand. And third, the mosquito bite is not an open wound (unless you have really scratched it open) that would allow bacteria to enter your body.
Rabies is typically a fatal, degrading disease in dogs.
they all got rabies and half died I HAS RABIES