Like a baby's bottom
very
because it is soft and sweet
because we kill them for there soft skin to make clothing
most young animals do play with soft toy's, so i am persuming yes, tigers most probably do play with animal toys.
Tigers can roar, growl, hiss and they also "chuff". Chuffing is produced by soft exhaling through the mouth and basically means they are content or all is well. Tigers cannot purr.
I hate it. Humans kill cheetahs for mainly fur. Same with tigers, and now tigers are endangered!
A tiger's paw has soft pads, which allow tigers to stalk their prey as quietly as possible. They have five retractable claws, on their front paws, which are very sharp and are used for attacking prey or occasionally other tigers. Their hind feet only have four claws, which are used mainly for defence in fights with other tigers by kicking and scratching. To see a tigers paw, see related link below..
tigers can strongly bite their food because of their extremely strong jaws and teeth, so a tiger can easily rip open hard or soft skin. so their teeth are suitableto the food they eat.
The music brings them in the key change to a minor key. When we dream our dreams, they come and tear the our hopes apart. And, by the way, thunder is hardly soft. -Mike - I always thought it was because Tigers are predators, and by association word night implies sexual predictors. Voices soft as thunder suggests a mixture of the softness used to seduce but with the underlying pressure to succumb to (his) wishes.
Well Tigers in touch therefur is ruff like a horses main and there tails should be soft but not soft like cotton.And there faces MUST have soft fur but yet again there fur isn't as soft as you would think........... but the fur around there face is much softer than the fur on their body, Why you ask?Well if the fur around there faces aren't as soft as they are there faces and tend to irate at the face area of the tiger.Sincerely your true writer,Puddnehead
A tiger's fur is typically orange with black stripes, providing camouflage in its natural habitat. The fur is thick and coarse to help insulate the tiger in different weather conditions, such as keeping it warm in colder temperatures.
Yes, the Sumatran tigers are the smallest tigers in the world.