Definitely! It al depends on when you ovulate. Check out this article for more information: http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/740849/trying_to_conceive_a_helpful_guide.html
When you ovulate depends on your menstrual cycle. You ovulate two weeks BEFORE your period, so how soon after your period you ovulate depends on how long your menstrual cycle is.
Yes, 104 weeks is two or three days shy of two years, and 36 months is three years.
I took the SAT pre classes last year before my real test. The best time according to me is two weeks before the SAT test, because you will not forget the contents you take from the pre classes in such a short time.
No, by the time a woman is two days off menstruation the egg is long dead - ovulation typically occurs two weeks before menstruation, and at most there is only a viable egg present for 48 hours. Typically a woman will not have fertile quality cervical mucus present at this point either. However unless a woman uses fertility awareness methods she cannot know exactly when she is fertile or when she is not, also often women can mistake vaginal bleeding for other reasons (such as ovulation bleeding) for menstruation so assume they are not pregnant when actually they may be at risk of pregnancy or already be pregnant. Long answer short is that it is not possible, however if a woman wants to avoid unwanted pregnancy she should always use birth control.
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Nine weeks before that, which is the same as two weeks after your last menstrual period. Doctors include the two weeks before conception in their calculation of the pregnancy date; that is, they start the calculation from the first day of your last period. Approximately 10/31/09.
if my due date is September the 14th what day did i get pregnet.
The luteal phase after ovulation is typically two weeks long on average. So two weeks prior to your period lines up with ovulation when it is possible to conceive. It is unlikely to have any symptoms of pregnancy two weeks before your period. Good luck!
Doctors measure pregnancy from the first day of your last period, but you don't conceive until two weeks after that. Your baby was conceived 3 weeks ago.
obvoulisly you have had an early period
You ovulate two weeks before menstruation - thus the soonest you'd skip a period is that first period, two weeks after you get pregnant.
Yes
As pregnancy is counted from the beginning of your period, 2 weeks is actually when you conceive. So you conceived on February 1st.
5 weeks and 2 days before that day - give or take a day or two.
If your first day of your period was on Oct.25,2008,then that would make you 18 weeks pregnant(4 months two weeks)and going by that the baby would be born on or around August 1,2009.
First few days of the last two weeks are considered as danger period. You are likely to get the pregnancy at this period.
The most likely time to conceive is in the middle of your menstrual cycle so your due date is calculated from two weeks before your missed period (ie at the time of ovulation and therefore the time most likely for gestation to have begun