No. if you were you could get pregnant.
No, normally Birth Control stops ovulation. It is possible to have breakthrough ovulation; that's how birth control pill failures occur.
Do you ovulate while breastfeeding
Normally a woman does not ovulate while taking the birth control pill. This is the birth control pill's primary method of action.
no. birth control stimulates your hormones so you do not ovulate while having sex.
Yes, if you stop birth control, you may ovulate.
If you put on the birth control patch while ovulating, you will likely still ovulate. Your next period may be later than expected. You will have pregnancy protection after you use the patch correctly for seven days.
Yes, you can't get pregnant unless you ovulate. If you ovulate in spite of taking the birth control pill, you could get pregnant.
Birth control pill will prevent you from ovulating.
You don't get periods while on hormonal birth control. Hormonal birth control works by suppressing your menstrual cycles so you no longer ovulate, this is how it prevents pregnancy - if you don't ovulate it means you don't menstruate. The bleeding women get while on the pill is withdrawal bleeding, this is caused when you go from your active to inactive pills due to the change in hormones - this occurs roughly every 28 days due to the order in which you take the pills.
The birth control patch is meant to prevent ovulation. That's how it works to prevent pregnancy.
No, the opposite happens you will ovulate.
You can't predict the time of ovulation if you're on hormonal birth control. If you want to get pregnant, stop taking birth control.
No, the point of birth control is so that your body will not ovulate so that you will not get pregnant. Your period is withdrawal bleeding, which is not the same as regular periods.
No, Lutera is a birth control pill meant to prevent ovulation.