No, not typically.
Yes. They can still catch diseases and/or illnesses.
Because it shares blood and every cell in the mothers body.
A cat cannot give any disease that it does not have itself. A cat can bring in fleas from outside, and fleas may in turn carry diseases; and there is a slight potential for a cat to bring in infected mice (in drought-stricken areas, cats have been known to hunt and catch mice with hantavirus). But by and large, a healthy cat will not bring any significant diseases with him.
No, a cat cannot catch a human cold, just like a human cannot catch a cold or flu off a cat. These viruses are species-specific, meaning that they can only be caught from an infected animal of the same species.
A person who studies blood and the diseases of the blood is a hematologist.
Frank Bloom has written: 'The blood chemistry of the dog and cat' -- subject(s): Analysis, Blood, Cats, Diagnosis, Diseases, Dogs, Veterinary medicine
one diseases a cat can have is rabies!
Neko no ketsueki is blood cat. The literal translation is "cat of blood"
Once a cat has caught and eaten a mouse, if the cat is going to catch anything from the mouse, it is a bit too late for vaccination... vaccination is to prevent disease, and by the time you have the cat to the vet for the booster shot, if it is infected, the infection is already past the point at which vaccination will help. If you expect that your cat will be catching mice, vaccination with periodic boosters is a good idea, as mice do carry diseases that cats can catch.
A scientist who studies blood and diseases is called a hematologist. Hematology is the branch of medicine dealing with the study of blood, the blood-forming organs, and blood diseases.
No you cannot.
You are in luck. You can't catch gay diseases at all because there is no such thing as a gay disease.