No. Lemurs are not marsupials, but placental mammals.
No monkeys are marsupials, so - no - baby monkeys do not live in a pouch.
yes
No, the females carry the young in their pouch while they grow, and when the young outgrow the pouch, they move to the mother's back, which they leave shortly after to live on their own.
In a pouch in front of them, on their stomach.
Mammals which have a pouch feature where they carry and nourish their young are known as marsupials.
All marsupial young are known as joeys. Almost all marsupials carry their young in a pouch (the numbat, for example, does not have a pouch).
If you mean pouch the answer is a mammal
Mothers nurse their young with milk and carry them around on their belly or back.
A marsipial is a mammal that can carry it's baby in a pouch.
The pouch is purely for the purpose of carrying the young joey.
No, but they have a sort of pouch where they carry their young.
All mother kangaroos carry their young joeys in a pouch.
A marsupial is an animal that has a pouch. A kangaroo has a pouch so it is considered a marsupial. A kangaroo uses the pouch to carry their young after they give birth.