If you overfeed it, yes.
alot
To find out how much milk each kitten gets, divide the total amount of milk by the number of kittens. There are 6 cups of milk and 5 kittens, so each kitten receives 6 cups ÷ 5 kittens = 1.2 cups of milk. Therefore, each kitten gets 1.2 cups of milk.
It needs to suckle on its mother not have any food at all, only the milk Update: If you are bottle-feeding a kitten, make sure you get feline replacement milk (not cow's milk) and check with your veterinarian to see how often you need to do feedings.
Depends how much oz the baby takes.
It will depend on the age and weight of the kittens. Check the formula instructions or ask the vet
they might get sick same affect as milk drink to much might get sick
To live on, no. They need mother's milk or kitten milk substitute from the pet store. As a treat it's fine in small amounts. Too much can give them indigestion. As kittens age they start becoming lactose intolerant, so giving a cat over about the age of four months milk can cause diarrhea. But they still love drinking it.
I don't think you can make it. You simply don't have access to all the necessary ingredients (all the nutrients, vitamins, minerals, and other substances that go into it). Even if you had these ingredients, I don't think you could just throw them all in a pot and make formula. They make this stuff in factories, not in home kitchens. Any formula you make yourself simply would not have the full range of nutrients that a pre-made formula will. If not cooked properly, it could even be dangerous. Do you really think it's best for your kitten, to feed them something you just haphazardly threw together yourself, having no real scientific knowledge of what cats need to eat and how it needs to be prepared? It would be much better for the kitten's health if you just bought it, instead of trying to make it. It's available in any pet store, and it is not expensive. Just ask the salespeople if they have kitten formula for kittens that are not old enough to eat solid food. The liquid formula usually comes with a powder supplement, and you mix a certain amount of the powder into the formula. The amount you mix in depends on the kitten's age.
AnswerJust pull it out from it's mother stomacchIf the mother isn't stopping the kitten, you shouldn't either. The mother knows when it is time for the kittens to leave the nest so to speak. If the kitten is the only one left in the litter that still drinks then you can take action, especially if the mother has tried to stop it.
Typically, the mother does this. However, if you own a kitten who does not have a mother and is at the proper stage for weaning, do like a mother cat would do: No matter how much it begs, it should not live on a diet of milk.
You call local vets until you find one that will answer this question for free, then you buy the formula they tell you to buy. At the very least, go to a pet store and ask the employees there for a formula for newborn kittens. You are better off asking a vet though, and a great many will at least provide the info for free, if not the formula. If you're really broke, try local no-kill animal shelters. You might have to give up the kitten so they can take care of it, but that's better than it dying.Kittens, like newborn human babies, get a lot more than just nutrients from their mother's milk. They get immunological boosters and all sorts of stuff that you cannot provide otherwise.DO NOT feed them cow's milk or cat food or anything else you might have in your house. You can soak your pinky in water and let them suck that so they don't get dehydrated, but you are better off letting them go hungry than feeding them something they'll die from.All that said, assuming you have the formula and you're following the directions for heating it and putting it in a bottle and all that, the most important thing is to keep the kitten level.Think about human babies: they're held just below the breast but mostly they have to suck the milk out themselves. If you're using a bottle, nature isn't helping all that much so you have to make sure that the kittens are sucking, not just letting the milk fall into their mouths. If gravity's doing all the work then they're going to aspirate (breath in) the milk and it's going to come out of their nose. That means you should hold the kitten higher and the bottle lower.Good luck, god speed, and I bet the kitten's cute as hell. :)
Go to any pet store and buy suppliment formula to feed the kitten. Call a vet and make an appointment. They will be able to tell you how much to feed it and when and will also make sure that the kitten is healthy. If you cannot afford to take the kitten to a vet call a local shelter and they may help.