No. Rodents are placental mammals and kangaroos are marsupials. The two are not even remotely related.
Confusion can arise from the fact that there are kangaroo rats, which are rodents of North America, and rat-kangaroos which are marsupials, and members of the kangaroo family in Australia.
it has fur and provide breast milk
A kangaroo is a marsupial mammal.
Yes, the grey kangaroo is a mammal, a marsupial.
No. Only the female of any mammal species can be pregnant.
No, the kangaroo is a marsupial or known as a mammal. A fish isn't a mammal.
The kangaroo is indeed a mammal.
Being a mammal, kangaroo is a vertibrate
The Red Kangaroo, assuming you're talking about native animals, and animals not extinct.
No. The kangaroo rat is not a pouched mammal, or marsupial. The kangaroo rat is completely unrelated to the marsupil known as the kangaroo; nor is it related to the rat-kangaroo, the smaller species of kngaroos.
The kangaroo is not a placental mammal. It is a marsupial. Marsupials and placental mammals are different from each other.
Marsupial
Being a mammal, a kangaroo is a vertebrate. All mammals are vertebrates, because every mammal has a backbone. They are members of the subphylum Vertebrata, chordates with backbones or spinal columns.