No you can't; it is impossible.
Being promiscuous (having a lot of sexual partners) does not create HIV - you have to be infected by one of your partners (or by some other means on transmission). The fact that you are promiscuous (have a lot of sexual partners) does not significantly increase your risk of contracting HIV. The risk would arise if you were not having safer sex with them.
No. One partner must already have a disease.No.No it can't be transmitted between two uninfected persons, but if both partners have more sexual partners then it is difficult to know if one is not infected.
No, AIDS can't occur if partners are hiv negative.
Discordant means that one of the partners has HIV and the other does not.
Yes you can if your partners i unfaithful.
all it takes is one time, so yes.
when you had sex with a person who has the virus, when you have sex with different partners and if you used a syringe or infused with blood that came from a person having HIV.
Yes it does.
What defines a normal relationship, Many people with HIV, and AIDS continue to have relationships but must change there behaviors to protect not only themselves but also their partners, The stress involved for both partners is huge,
Yes. Using a condom will protect you from catching HIV. If you do not use a condom, then the risk of catching HIV will depend on the HIV-positive partners viral load. The higher the viral load the higher the risk. Even with an undetectable viral load, HIV can still be transmitted.
Kissing alone (saliva) will not transmit HIV. There is 1 documented case I am aware of where a person was infected with HIV from deep kissing, but it was caused from blood in the mouth of the infected person transmitted through the gums of the uninfected person.
Scientists and researchers have been searching for an effective HIV vaccine for many years. Because of HIV's ability to mutate so rapidly however, it has been difficult to develop an effective vaccine. Studies continue, but increasingly the opinion is that an effective vaccine is still many years away. But even when there is an effective HIV vaccine, it will not mean that there is a cure for HIV. A vaccine will help to keep uninfected people uninfected but will not directly benefit people who are already living with HIV/AIDS. The ongoing advances in HIV treatment are increasingly becoming what could be considered to be a "cure" for people living with HIV/AIDS. These medications, when taken as directed, can help diminish the impact that HIV has on the body and allow people living with HIV to live long and productive lives.