The only way a child could get genital plantar warts is if their genitals came in direct contact with someone else's genitals that had the warts on them. They cannot contract them on their genitals during childbirth.
There are around 120 different serovars of HPV and some do cause common warts and plantar warts. These are not sexually transmitted.
Plantar warts are, by definition, warts on the bottom of your foot or toes. A wart appearing anywhere else on the body is not a plantar wart, even if it's caused by one of the strains of the human papillomavirus that's generally associated with plantar warts. (If you're asking if it's possible for the virus to spread from a plantar wart to other locations on the body: yes, that's possible. But it wouldn't be CALLED a plantar wart; if it appeared on the palm, for instance, it would be a palmar wart.)
Duct tape won't remove plantar warts.
HPV has over 30 different types. Only a few of the types cause warts. Unless your healthcare provider tells you that you have genital warts, you do not.
HPV means human papillomavirus, the virus that causes warts and, in certain subtypes, is associated with cancer of the cervix, penis, vulva, anus, and some head and neck cancers.HPV is genital warts.
You can be reinfected with genital warts in the future. HPV vaccination can lower the risk.
Yes they are; HPV is the virus that causes genital warts.
on the soles of your feet
Plantar warts
Technically, yes.
No it is not.
HPV or genital warts is often cauliflower shaped.