They don't care for them except for one type of frog I can't put a name to but it cares for its young until they are fully grown.
They don't ! Once the young reptiles are born (or hatched) - they are completely independent from the 'parent' reptile.
via eggs like most reptiles
mammal are born already alive and reptiles are hatched form eggs like birdsANS2:While some reptiles are born live (garter snakes) instead of being hatched from eggs and some mammals (platypus and echidna) are hatched from eggs instead of being born live, the primary distinguishing characteristic is that mammalian young count on getting milk from the mother. No extant reptile provides milk to her young.
Reptiles are born in eggs. It is part of what makes them reptiles.
Insect and mammals do not look like their parents when they are born.
To some degree. Both birds and reptiles reproduce sexually and have offspring that resemble their parents. All birds and most reptiles lay eggs. One key difference is that reptiles are born largely able to fend for themselves while birds are fairly helpless and need their parents' care. The only reptiles that provide parental care are crocodiles and alligators, which help their young hatch and protect them from predators, but do not provide food.
No an ostrich looks like its parents
snakes stay with their parents for about two weeks after they hatch, then their parents abandon them.
Not all young snakes resemble their parents. An example would be a dark brown snake's offspring being a light yellow.
Reptiles - from the moment the baby reptiles are born (or hatch) - they are completely independent.
Like Shakespeare, they were born in England.
Most reptiles hatch from eggs, but some species of lizard and snake are born live.