Only if the child is allergic.
that is the stupidest question i have ever heard, rabbits (mumble-mumble) sickness (mumble-mumble) child (mumble-mumble) pointless!!
The rabbit may also bite the child which could then cause the child to have an infection
If your child is a girl, then they might be pregnant.
Rabbits can shed fur when they are stressed or scared, but shedding due to fear from a child would depend on the individual rabbit's sensitivity and how it's being handled. It's important to handle rabbits gently and calmly to avoid causing unnecessary stress.
Not everyone gets morning sickness. If you do, it's not necessarily in the morning, either. (I had morning sickness with one child, but not the other. Both are boys.)
yes, their all rabbits.
rabbits, but they make a bigger mess.
Rabbits make their burrows by digging with their hind legs.
Rabbits can make sounds. They make a kind of squeal or scream when they are scared.
Rabbits burrow into the ground.
No, not at all
Not a domestuc rabbit. Wild rabbits are larger ans more "dangerous" but still probably couldn't hurt a small child. Besides that a wild rabbit wouldn't let a child get close to it.
actually, rabbits dont make any noise at all. they communicate with other rabbits by moving their whiskers and with the use of somelike vibration that only rabbits can hear.
Angora rabbits can eat the exact same plants as other domestic rabbits. See the related question below for more info and helpful links about the rabbit diet. Rabbits can eat some varieties of lettuce in moderation. Do not give your rabbit white/light-coloured lettuces (like romaine hearts or iceberg): these have very little nutritional value for rabbits, and they can lead to sickness (like diarrhea). Dark-coloured lettuces are healthy for rabbits in moderation (like fully-grown romaine, red leaf, green leaf, mescaline mix -- just remove the white/light-coloured bits): you can include these in the rabbit's daily "salad," although too much can lead to sickness (like diarrhea). It's a good idea to make the rabbit's salad from a wide variety of leafy greens and to rotate which greens you serve regularly: that way, you don't over-serve any particular variety.