Yes - very much so.
Kangaroos are grazing animals and they need strong teeth for chewing the grass they eat. The teeth of the kangaroo are continuously being worn down by the tough grasses they eat. Instead of continuously growing, once a kangaroo's front teeth are worn down completely, they fall out, and the back teeth move forwards to take the place of the worn front teeth. Kangaroos have four such pairs of chewing teeth.
Monkeys are not grazing animals, and they do not feed on coarse vegetation, so their teeth are sharper and narrower than kangaroos' teeth.
size
they are awesome
There isn't much of a color variation between alligators and crocodiles. The biggest difference between the two animals is the shape of their jaws and teeth placement.
CROCODILES!!!!!!!!!!!!
similarities between kangaroo and human
There is no other stage between joey and adult kangaroo.
both got: core with DNA Golgi system ribosomes Mitochondria membrane endoplasmic reticulum cytoplasm
The only real difference is they are different sizes and the crocodiles can survive in salt water, most other things are the same, exempt for a few physical differences.
sad
No. Crocodiles and alligators are both of the order Crocodilia (as are caimans and gharials), but they separate when you get down to superfamily and family, and there are very distinct differences between the two which makes them unique.
There is no such thing as a mix between a boar and a kangaroo. It is impossible for these two species to interbreed.
The Eastern Grey Kangaroo has grey-brown fur. Its shoulders are slightly darker while its tail has a dark tip. Eastern Grey kangaroos have strong hind legs and short forelegs. The forelegs have no thumb. The female kangaroo has a pouch for the joey (baby). They have a long, powerful, muscular tail to help balance.