Yes, unless they are stillborn, meaning dead.
No. There were many type of sabre-toothed cats however.
First of all you should know that the correct name for these beasts is Sabre-toothed Cats. There is no such thing as a saber-toothed tiger. There were many species of sabre-toothed cats, and no they were not the first cats of all time.
meat
I don't think so well no because they're mammles... right?
The line of sabre toothed cats has been extinct for 10,000 years.
Yes. Smilodon (the scientific name for the Sabre Toothed Cat) was in the family Felidae, which includes all modern cats.
they lived in alaska canda and siberia thousands of years ago
There were many species of sabre toothed cats (they were not tigers at all), the largest was Smilodon Populator, at nearly 800 pounds or more.
Sabre-toothed cats, like modern big cats, typically gave birth to litters of one to four cubs at a time. The exact number could vary depending on factors such as the individual animal's health and environmental conditions. Generally, most litters consisted of two or three cubs.
The correct spelling is "sabre-toothed" tiger, more correctly "sabre-toothed cat" because Smilodon and similar cats pre-date modern tigers, although they share a similar appearance and status.
When some saber-toothed cats where alive humans were also so yes.
When they were alive, they lived in north and south america.