It depends on what species the frogs are. African dwarf frogs (which remain very small) are ideal tankmates for female bettas provided the tank is filtered and large enough for all the occupants. African clawed frogs are fine while young, but grow quite large and will eat the female bettas when fully grown; when grown they also need a much larger tank than the average betta sorority.
Unless the female is ready to mate, you should keep a divider between them.
they don't share food
This is a BIG NO NO!! Bettas need at least 2.5 gallons of water to themselves, and if you put a male and a female together, it will most likely result with you have two dead bettas. Keep your boy and girl in separate 2.5 gallon heated tanks.
there both anphibians
No. Although frogs & toads share a common ancestor, they are now classified as completely separate species.
Any Species that share the same poison traits, such as... Poison Dart Frogs.
Frogs and birds are both vertebrates with skeletal systems, but frogs are amphibians and birds are avians. They have different reproductive strategies, with frogs laying eggs in water and birds laying eggs on land. Both groups are adapted for their specific habitats, with frogs having moist skin for absorbing oxygen, and birds having feathers for flight.
Both "Albino" and "Pied" are simply variants in color of a species. As long as the Betta fish you want to breed share the same genus, they can breed.... if i need to make that clearer, YES they can breed. :)
They share jumping like frogs. They also share size and personality like when a human or larger animal comes near they swim/hop away from them.
I would not try it because the betta might kill it or it might make the fish so mad that it could get so much stress that it will die.
I think, mentally even our law professionals have not accpeted the share of female child, so as not to answer this question.
Not since the birth of vertebrates. Humans are mammals and frogs are amphibians. However, some research has shown that it is possible that some animals from different Orders have mated, so it is possible that we share a more recent ancestor. In response to demands that God made them and that's that, this is established biology. God may have made them, but that doesn't change the facts.