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No, twins are born from the same pregnancy, and at the same time give or take an hour or so.
They are triplets
There are one set of twins that were born 87 days apart. One baby was born on June 1, 2012. The next baby was born on August 26, 2012.
Theoretically, yes. Twins are usually born at least a few minutes apart, sometimes an hour or two apart. It is rarely possible for delivery of twins to be spaced out even more than that. If a woman delivered one twin shortly before midnight and the another twin shortly after midnight, then the two twins would be born in different days and actually have different birthdays--so they would be 1 day apart in age. Twins are different ages in every case. However, the question is by what time difference. In other words, one minute, two minutes, ten minutes. Still, you will not find them separated by much more in most cases. Twins develop within the the same pregnancy.
No She did not have twins, she gave birth to her first child. Daughter, Isla, born on 17 January 2007 at 9:43 a.m after a 27-hour labour. She is currently expecting her second child which is due sometime in September 2010
Movie Twins - 2006 Rush Hour 3 2-14 was released on: USA: 30 July 2007
The minimum should be $15 an hour, but depending on their age, the time of night, and number of kids (twins in your case), it could be up to $23-25 an hour.
Absolutely not ! Twins are usually born within a short time of each other - rarely more than an hour apart. ========== Unless perhaps you are asking about sperm whale twins - those CAN take 18 months. I imagine that there are a few pregnant women who FEEL like whales by the time their twins are delivered.
its the witching hour and it means midnight.
The cow shouldn't go for more than an hour between calving out twins, because there's a risk of the second twin suffocating due to the placenta detaching itself from the uterine wall. However, there is a chance that the second calf is a PATERNAL twin (not a maternal, as maternal twins ALWAYS share a placenta), and it could be some time, however rare, that the second calf will be born. Normally, though, twins usually follow soon after the other. Thus, the second twin should be within minutes after the first, so, if you suspect the cow has twins, you should get her in the head gate as soon as possible, glove up and go in to see if you can feel for another calf. If you do, quickly position the calf in the normal birthing position (if it isn't already), put the calving chains on, and start pulling. I'm sure your vet would tell you the same thing if he/she were asked that same question by you.
12 children are born every hour
one mile an hour