No. I don't know which test you use. An ovulation test will stay positive until your period is due. If you are pregnant it will stay positive, if your period comes the signe will drop away. See this website http://www.fwhc.org/birth-control/fam.htm Acutally that is not true. An ovulation test will not stay postitive until your period arives. From personal experience, when using my First Response Ovulation kit, I of course had my LH serge 2 weeks before my expected period. Since we are trying for number 3 I just had to see if their "myth" is true about that, and about a week ago I took an ovulation test just for the heck of it and it was a big fat negative no line at all except for the control line. I looked hard too LOL. Thus I still haven't received my AF this month and yet today I tried again on the ovulation just for the heck of it again and a faint second line appeared you can barely see it though. Anyways I wanted to just say that no it will not stay positive until you start your period, unless your luteal phase is a short one.
peace
its a sign of being pregnate don't freak
Ovulation induced by copulation.
It can mean ovulation. Some people can ovulate and feel nothing at all. It could also mean you have gas. You can't rely on it as a sign of ovulation.
The menstrual cycle is the reproductive cycle, so it's during your menstrual cycle that you would conceive - I think that you mean how long after menstruation can a child be conceived. This all depends on your cycle, ovulation typically occurs on day 14 but that's not the case for everyone - also remember that just because you conceive (egg fertilized by sperm) doesn't mean that you're gong to get pregnant or that the pregnancy will end in a child.
unable to be conceived by the mind
The ovulation fossa is a depression in the ovary from which the egg is released during ovulation in the horse. A veterinarian can palpate this fossa during a rectal palpation exam.
If you add the same constant to each element of a sample then the mean of this collection of values will be the mean of the original sample plus the constant. If you multiply each element of a sample by a constant then the mean of this collection of values will be the mean of the original sample multiplied by the constant.
one conceived from the Midi-chlorians.
Roughly, yes
You were conceived at a George Straight concert.
a product of many mind and energies