Yes a woman can give another woman HPV.
Yes, you can transmit HPV or other STDs if you have been diagnosed with HPV. Using condoms can lower the risk.
If someone with hepatitis has HPV, they can transmit it, just as someone without hepatitis can do. The two are unrelated.
Both males and females can carry and transmit HPV.
It is possible to transmit HPV via semen.
Yes
HPV does not start with just women, men carry it too. The concern is that some types of HPV cause cervical cancer.
Yes, a man can give a woman HPV and a woman can give a man HPV. To reduce the spread of HPV, males AND females can go to a clinic or their primary doctor and get the HPV vaccine in 3 different doses at 3 different times. If someone ALREADY has HPV, the HPV vaccine should still be taken because there are over 100 strains of HPV, and you may not have one of the strains that the vaccine prevents.
No, you should not donate plasma with hpv. This can transmit hpv to those needing plasma-based products. If you are discovered to be donating with hpv or any other std, you will be permanently banned on the National Donor Database, and never allowed to donate blood, plasma, organs, tissue or sperm.
Yes women with HPV give men genital warts.
No you can not be a carrier of HPV without having it yourself. A "carrier" is a common language term for someone who has infection and can infect others, but who has no symptoms of the infection. You can't pass an infectious disease like HPV unless you yourself are infected.
Yes. You can transmit HPV without any visible warts. Some types such as HPV-5 may establish infections that persist the lifetime of the individual without out ever manifesting any clinical symptoms. All HPV's are believed to be capable of establishing long-term "latent" infections. These may never be fully eradicated.
It is very unlikely that sharing a bathing suit will transmit HD TV.