Want this question answered?
It is possible that your partner is passing the trouble to you after you both have sex.
partner tree pose
The word 'partner' is both a verb (partner, partners, partnering, partnered) and a noun (partner, partners); for example: Verb: Our plan is to partner with other neighbors to form a neighborhood watch. Noun: He was made a partner in the law firm.
Both you and your parent's partner have rights to her.
If he sticks to the treatment regimen there's a high probability YES. He's also cured.If you tested negative, you will not pass it on. If he has it, he caught it from another partner.
If two trains are passing each other the relative speed can be found by adding the individual speeds of the two trains. This applies if the trains are passing each other in opposite directions. Should one be passing the other and both be moving in the same direction, the difference of the individual speeds would be the relative speed of the trains.
You get a partner, both sit in a pike position with full feet touching, grab hands, and pull each other to stretch out.
The term is "thrush" and yes you can pass this to a partner. However, if you have been treated and the symtoms are clear a partner who was infected by you can pass it back. Both parties need to be checked.
It is possible to fall back in love with a current or former partner but it takes effort on both sides. You both have to be ready, willing and able to move on from the past and look forward to the future together. There is no point in bringing up the past; that is best left where it belongs. If you both love each other enough and want it to work then it just might.
Not if you and your partner are both male or both female.
The major axis.
what do u mean "leave",anyway why not stick to one partner,i mean living in this cruel world and u still consider polygamy?have u 4gotten about HIV/AIDS and other STI's?