No, the vasa are cut and tied in vasectomy.
When the vas deferens are snipped or tied off to prevent the transport of sperm, it is called a vasectomy. This procedure is a form of permanent male sterilization.
In a vasectomy the vas deferens is cut and tied off.
Bilateral sterilization means both tubes (fallopian tubes or vasa deferens) were cut/tied/etc.
A vasectomy is not part of the reproductive system. It is a sterilization procedure done on men in which the vans deferens is cut and tied.
The procedure cuts or seals the vas deferens from each testicle. Sperm cannot then travel from the testes to the penis. It is considered permanent.
The vas deferens (plural: vasa deferentia) during a vasectomy are cut, then tied/sealed, in order to prevent sperm being ejaculated. - Wikipedia
From the epididymus, sperm travels into the vas deferens, two 18-inch tubes composed of smooth muscle and mucosa lined with cilia. (These are the structures that are cut and tied off during a vasectomy, preventing the sperm from moving any further.) The action of the smooth muscle and cilia move the sperm up around the bladder into two ejaculatory ducts, where they will mix with fluid from a seminal vesicle
Tide is a homophone for tied.
Tide is a homophone for tied.
I tied my shoelaces The rope was tied in knots Ann and I tied for first place
un-tied
The homophone for tied is tide as in the ocean tide.