Basic biology people
By C
@ShyBear88 (59342)
Sterling, Virginia
April 10, 2019 9:37am CST
Okay, seriously y’all we live in 2019 and this is basic biology so stop telling people how they can pick what gender they can make for a baby or how to get pregnant and have twins. This is basic biology I get it in some countries you might not get sexual education so you have to learn by asking question.
Here it’s the basic run down of creating an offspring just so you know I have 3. Sperm, meets egg this happens some time during ovulation. Male sperm can live up to 7 days in the female body. A female body is designed for her to be able to kill off most of the sperm the second it’s inside the uterus. We have fluids inside of us they take care of the weak and till them. The stronger sperm will survive they will make their journey into the uterus there they will try to find the egg before it reaches the uterus lining. If egg and sperm meet the sperm will try to eat it’s way into the eggs once it gets if, if gets inside conception has been reach. Cells will start to split and multiple eggs will then land and start to attached itself to the uterus lining. This is the blood line we see during our cycle when fertilization didn’t happen. During the first 4-6 weeks the cells will continue to divided and make more. During this time your child’s DNA is being formed. The moms 23 genes are give as well as the dads 23 genes (chromosome is the actual word). The mother always gives and X which is the gender gene the fathers sex gene will be either an X or a Y. This is the 23rd pair of gene the other 22 paired determined eye color, hair, height and other physical traits. The male 23rd gene determines the gender of baby. If it’s an X it’s a girl, if it’s a Y it’s a boy. If you don’t like the gender of your child blame the father. This is how it’s done.
1 person likes this
2 responses
@ShyBear88 (59342)
• Sterling, Virginia
11 Apr 19
I’m breaking down to simple form. Like I would if I was talking to my own kids. Biology only looks at 46 of our chromosomes
@NJChicaa (127116)
• United States
11 Apr 19
@ShyBear88 yeah but I wouldn't say that there are 23 or 46 "genes". That is totally not true.



