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Camels belong to the family Camelidae and thereby to the suborder Tylopoda. The Tylopoda themselves belong to the order Artiodactyla or cloven-footed animals. Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Class: Mammalia Order: Artiodactyla (EVEN-TOED UNGULATES) Sub: Tylopoda Family: Camelidae There are only two true camels; the dromedary or Arabian camel (one hump) and the Bactrain camel (two humps) Other members of the Camelidae are indiginous to South America and they are alpaca, guanaco, llama, and vicuna. The are of the same family, but are not true camels. Camels group/family is called Camelidae.
An Arachnid is an arthropod with eight or more legs, making the Solifugae (AKA camel spider) an arachnid, but not a "true" spider. Anything in the Arachnid family is considered a spider.
Nothing
A humpbacked camel. Well, true, but the specific description for a double-humped camel is - Bactrian camel. A single-humped camel is called a dromedary (FYI)
whales are not part of a fish family
false
No, it is part of the family of Melanthiaceae, not Liliaceae. It has also been known for being in the trilliaceae genus/family.
Yes, that is true. The Indo-European language family is one of the largest in the world and includes languages like English, Spanish, Hindi, Russian, and many others. About half of the world's population speaks a language that is part of this language family.
The one and only person left in her true family is Alec. Alec is her twin brother. He is also part of the Volturi.
Yes, alpaca milk is drinkable, but it may not taste good (just a warning.)
desert animals are strong, this is a premises. A camel is a desert animal, this is a premises. therefore a camel is a strong animal, this is a conclusion. all those statements are true but the last one is wrong because if a camel is a desert animal, it does not necessarily mean that it is also strong animal.
It is not true. Camel hair, mixed with wool, is often used to make sweaters and other clothing: coats, jackets, skirts, hosiery, etc.