37 weeks before the 7th of November 2012, when this question was asked, was the 22nd of February 2012.
37 weeks before the 7th of November 2012, when this question was asked, was the 22nd of February 2012.
37 weeks before the 7th of November 2012, when this question was asked, was the 22nd of February 2012.
37 weeks before the 7th of November 2012, when this question was asked, was the 22nd of February 2012.
37 weeks before the 7th of November 2012, when this question was asked, was the 22nd of February 2012.
37 weeks before the 7th of November 2012, when this question was asked, was the 22nd of February 2012.
37 weeks before the 7th of November 2012, when this question was asked, was the 22nd of February 2012.
37 weeks before the 7th of November 2012, when this question was asked, was the 22nd of February 2012.
37 weeks before the 7th of November 2012, when this question was asked, was the 22nd of February 2012.
37 weeks before the 7th of November 2012, when this question was asked, was the 22nd of February 2012.
37 weeks before the 7th of November 2012, when this question was asked, was the 22nd of February 2012.
37 weeks before the 7th of November 2012, when this question was asked, was the 22nd of February 2012.
what was the date 37 weeks ago
what was the date 37 weeks ago
Wednesday, November 8, 2017
Yes 37 weeks is considered full term
Yes, @ 37 weeks you are considered full term.
It is impossible to say as a term baby could be born from 37 weeks to 42 weeks of pregnancy. You need a due date from a period or an ultrasound to have an idea of conception date
7 times 37 = 259 days.
2455247.06715 depending on how accurate you need it. This was approx 13:37
Yes, its normal not to have contractions yet. 37 weeks is considered "full term" but a full term pregnancy is 37-42 weeks.
a little after 8 and a half months
Well, they told me the same thing. I didn't go into labor until two weeks later. It just depends on how well YOUR labor goes.
40 weeks