Yes, the orange tiger and the White tiger are related; just separated to different places and enviroments. According to the environments and sorrounding relates to it's colour ( eg. a jungle, a blacky orangey colour, snow, a blacky White colour).
The white tiger is a Bengal tiger with a genetic flaw that makes them white. Extremely rare in the wild.
the white tiger is related to your momma.
the color
I think white lions are better but regular tigers are better than regular lion
Same as regular tigers, water where/when they can get it.
The only difference between a regular tiger and a white tiger is colour. Having said that, yes a white tiger has sharp teeth, just like any other tiger would.
Yes, just like a regular tiger ... or you (more than 100 trillion of them).
There are several sub-species of tigers related to a white tiger. Bengal tiger and the Siberian tiger to name only two.
The white tigers are very aggressive.
Negative, the White Lion is merely a Cousin to the tiger in the Feline Family.
a white tiger
They aren't different the White Bengal Tiger is just white and the Bengal Tiger is orange.
If you mean by this can a white tiger beat a regular tiger in a battle easily. White tiger is half bigger than a regular tiger. Both are endangered and their natural habitats are not close together, so in nature they would never meet. But what comes to the fictional battle, they both are equipped with the same weapons, claws and teeth. White tiger is larger, granted, but size alone is not the crucial factor. Although the size of the white tiger may result the smaller indian tiger to not engage in the battle in the first place. As most felines auto-yield if the opponent is larger. If white tiger should attack, the indian tiger most likely would run. But, if the smaller tiger decides to attack a white tiger, then it must feel it can win. Perhaps the white tiger is wounded or old. If the indian tiger attacks, then the battle can result any way. White tigers are merely a rare color morph of the Bengal tiger, and can be found wherever Bengal tigers are found. They can occur in a litter with normal colored cubs, and often do. But this color phase is only very rarely found, with one white cub born in every 1000 litters or so. They are not a separate species from the Bengal at all. However, the same gene that makes them white can make them slightly larger than normal colored Bengals, but the difference is very slight. The only tiger subspecies larger on average than the Bengal is the Amur, or Siberian tiger, and white specimens are virtually unknown among this subspecies.