As long as the ovary still releases eggs, yes. When you are ready to become pregnant, you might want to purchase an ovulation predictor kit (found next to the pregnancy tests) to help you in becoming pregnant. You can also talk to your doctor to find out specific details about how to help you become pregnant.
Yes. 'Ovulate' means to release an egg into the fallopian tube. Both ovaries have eggs in them, so if someone only had one they could still ovulate.
No - looking purely at menstruation, this is the shedding of the uterus lining...so if a woman has no uterus she cannot menstruate.
yes.
Absolutely.
Yes
Yes; that's what happens in a woman with one ovary.
To release an egg from the ovary
If it is a normal ovary, and the human has normal cycles, it will ovulate every month.
You ovulate (ovulaion) when an egg cell (ovum) matures and is released from your ovary.
It means you're about to ovulate.
IF you ovulate, you release an egg. This is what ovulation is. The ovaries will release a mature egg into the fallopian tube. It is more of a question of whether or not you ovulate. But an egg will always be released at ovulation.
I ovulate from both of my ovaries interchangeably. If one month it comes from the left, then the next it comes from the right. I dont know if everyone is like this but this is how my body works. I can feel it when i ovulate, which not all woman can. Pay attention and you might be able to figure it out yourself.
Yes... I was born without a cervix or womb.
Eggs only move from the ovaries to the uterus. They never move from one ovary to the other ovary.
Your ovulation is from one side each month, and each ovary runs on its own cycle. Usually they match and you get your period at the same time each month. This means that if your period is every 30 days, your right ovary drops an ovule (egg) this month. 30 days from now, your left ovary will drop one. 90 days from now your right ovary will activate again and drop an ovule. And so forth. However, if one month you ovulate early, meaning you get your period early a few days, the next month you will ovulate on your original schedule on the opposite side, which means that period will feel late to you, when in reality it is running on its own proper schedule.
Yes. That's the usual way of things, however there are times when both ovaries give up an egg. This is the origin of fraternal twins. Sometimes neither ovary produces, just take a month off. Under the influence of fertility drugs as much as a dozen eggs can be produced in a given month.
An ovary contains one or more ovules.