A group of six babies can be referred to as a "half dozen babies."
Coral snakes are not known to take care of their babies. They typically lay eggs and once the eggs hatch, the baby snakes are independent and must fend for themselves.
None. Oxen don't have "babies." This is because most oxen, if not all, are males, mainly castrated, that are trained to pull carts, not to be bred to produce "babies."
The jaguar does not have a habitat they just wonder all over jungles and rain forests
They nurse their babies. Like all mammals, they give their babies milk.
Alligators lay 20-50 eggs at once, sometimes up to 60. Not all will hatch, and not all will survive.
The babies, once born, are all the same.
Not all Jaguars have the physical animal Jaguar on the front of them. Many Jaguars now just have a symbol on them instead of the statue.
A female platypus lays one to three eggs, all of which are likely to hatch.
No. All the pharaohs were once babies and their mothers were usually queens.
There once was a jaguar from Tibet Who always seemed to want to fret he fretted all the time because he could never rhyme etc etc etc
Well all hamsters usually have about 2 to 20 babies. But make sure you have another cage for the mother once the babies are a few days old, otherwise the mother will either eat, or attack the babies.
Yes it is, but not all at once. I know someone who actually had 18 babies. Hope that helps.
If the subject at all, many babies would be the complete subject and babies the simple subject.
Hard to say, they all don't hatch at the same time. It's possible to get 30-50 or more.
There isn't a term for this since it can't happen. A woman couldn't carry that many babies and have all of them live.
All hamsters can have 5 - 12 babies with the average of 10 babies.