Menstrual cycle consists of two phase: follicular phase and luteal phase. Luteal phase starts the day after ovulation and ends the day before you get your menstruation. Many women have a luteal phase that is about 14 days long, but it can range from 10-16 days. So, if you have 28 day cycle and length of luteal phase 14 days - ovulation occurs on the 14 day of the cycle. If you have 31 day cycle, and the length of luteal phase 14 days - ovulation takes place on the 17 day. If you have 31 day cycle but the length of luteal phase 16 days - ovulation occurs on the 15 day. It's more easy to use calendar to predict ovulation, e.g. i use this one www.ladys-calendar.com
To be honest, it really depends on the woman and her body at that particular time. Since girls' bodies are always changing it's hard to predict EXACTLY when ovulation will occur. 14 days is the average among those who have full and regular 28 day cycles, but some women don't have regular 28 day cycles so their ovulation will happen at different times. So, it really depends. . .
Yes. Your menstrual cycle will always start 14 days after ovulation
No It varies from person to person, usually it occurs about 6 to 7 days before a period. It is never definate
Yes. During a typical 28-day menstrual cycle, ovulation happens at mid-cycle. So. the the question you asked is very typical.
No. Women only ovulate for about two days at mid cycle.
Yes. Menstruation occurs after ovulation to clear the tubes. So generally you ovulate the days before your "period"
No, if a woman has no menstrual cycle then she cannot get pregnant. The menstrual cycle includes ovulation, no ovulation means no pregnancy. This is how hormonal Birth Control such as the combination pill works, it suppresses the menstrual cycles in order to stop ovulation to prevent unintended pregnancy.
The menstrual cycle is the reproductive cycle in human beings, and ovulation is one phase of the menstrual cycle. Each cycle a woman will ovulate and the uterine lining plups-up ready for possible pregnancy, but if she doesn't get pregnant then the uterine lining sheds (menstruation).
One of the methods to predict ovulation is calendar method. You just check you menstrual cycle and calculate ovulation. e.g. If you have a 28-day cycle, ovulation starts around the 14th day of the menstrual cycle. I use this calendar http://www.ladys-calendar.com. and it helps me to know days of ovulation.
Typically on day 14 of the menstrual cycle is when ovulation occurs - when an egg is released from the ovary. However everyone's menstrual cycles are different, if the cycle is longer it's likely ovulation occurs far later in the cycle than this.
Ovulation
During ovulation
Ovulation is when your ovaries release an egg. Menstruation occurs when that egg is not fertilised and your menstrual cycle starts a new. Discharge is something you get throughout your entire menstrual cycle.
Between each ovulation, the lining the uterus is shed in the menstrual cycle. If the egg is fertilized, no further ovulation occurs and no menstrual shedding happens.
The Luteal phase in which ovulation begins.
The menstrual cycle is the whole reproductive cycle, I think maybe you mean the menstrual phase. The first day of menstruation is day one of your menstrual cycle, ovulation typically occurs around 14 days into the menstrual cycle - although everyone is different.
The menstrual cycle is the shedding of the endometrium of the uterus.The ovarian cycle occurs about 14 days after the menstrual cycle and is when ovulation occurs (release of an oocyte, or egg)The menstrual cycle and the ovulation cycle are the same thing, the reproductive cycle is the process of releasing an egg from the ovary and if pregnancy doesn't occur the uterine lining that has built-up to support the potential pregnancy is shed. The different names just relate to different events withi the cycle: ovulation and menstruation.The menstrual cycle is how often you get a period, where you bleed. The ovarian cycle is where you ovulate. It is associated with the menstrual cycle, because you ovulate on the 14th day, but it is separate from menstruating
The menstrual cycle is the entire reproductive cycle including menstruation and ovulation - basically a woman is always experiencing her menstrual cycle. There is absolutely nothing to say that a woman should wear loose clothing at any point in her cycle.