They are mustelids, the weasel group.
Well the wolf is part of the canine family and that shows a wolverine is too. Answer is both.
They can both be the same size, wolverines are part of the weasel family so can be badgers, therefore....they are similar and also may hunt the same type of animals
they call a wolverine a skunk bear because it is part of the weasel family and looks like a skunk bear
The wolverine is part of the mustilade(weasel) family which also includes the otter, badger, stoat and ferret (domesticated polecat). However, I have been to identify an animal which resembles the wolverine, much more closely. I saw this animal on a zoo documentary in the UK. I remember it being called a bear, but have found no bears like it. It was bigger than a wolverine but more squat and was said to have an extrodinary bite and no fear at all! It was dark brown with pale markings on its face. The only one I can think of is the Tayra, I have added a related link, so that you can compare them.
A wolf is a canine (related to dogs.) A wolverine is a mustelid (related to weasels.)
Not at all. Wolverines are placental mammals. The Tasmanian Devil is a marsupial. Specifically, it is a Dasyurid or carnivorous marsupial, so it is in the family Dasyuridae.
no it is not! technical
well, if X-Men is part of Marvel (which they are), than logically so is Wolverine
The wolverine is a mammal belonging to the family Mustelidae.
This takes place in X-Men (vol. 2) #25 and Wolverine (vol. 2) #75 as part of the Fatal Attractions crossover.
no she is not but i think she is part wolverine
You can find cartoon snakes in the hit flash movie "Badger Badger Badger". There is a cartoon snake that passes by every so often as part of the loop.