Mammals, such as kittens, have a cord that connects them to the placenta. The placenta transfers food and oxygen to the baby while it is growing. That cord, the umbilical cord, goes from the placenta to the navel (or, on a cat, where the navel would be). Sometimes that cord can get wrapped around part of the body during birth.
This is not certain. It depends on when the mother cat got rabies. If it is still in its early stages, the kittens may not catch it, but eventually the organism that causes rabies will migrate through the placenta and infect the kittens. The organism will, I believe, be passed in mother's milk, so if the kittens nurse, they most likely will become infected.
No, a cat that has never had kittens cannot nurse.
Yes, the dad cat can be around the kittens.
'with two kittens' describe the cat. So, you should write 'is sleeping'. But if you mean that all three of them are sleeping, write 'A cat and his two kittens are sleeping'.
kittens is little cat(s)
A nursing mother cat cannot get a rabies shot or any type of vaccine in particular. Vaccines contain live components that can cross the placenta and may cause defects or even death in the fetus.
Kittens, possibly tabby kittens
No, it is not recommended to spay a cat while she is nursing her kittens. It is best to wait until the kittens are weaned before spaying the mother cat.
They from in a placenta
No, it is not recommended to spay a cat while she is nursing her kittens. It is best to wait until the kittens are weaned before spaying the mother cat to ensure her health and the health of the kittens.
Your cat can not have kittens. There is no way to make that happen.