Your question is somewhat ambiguous ( appropriate term ah so). One basic rule is that almost always, as with any identical twins, they take the same gender, either both boys or both girls. No mixed genders - like the fictional Bobbsey Twins , a boy and a girl ( Fraternal twins can be this type, but not identical or Siamese. also, generally they are conjoined at the hip, or as one Carnival Barker put it ( In the Gunsmoke posture!) There are other joining bands, also. The Girls can be beautiful
Conjoined twins cannot be bred. This condition is not genetic.A set of male conjoined twins fathering children with a set of female conjoined twins will almost certainly produce children who are not even twins at all.
The most famous (Chinese) conjoined twins were the Siamese twins
conjoined twins are very very very rare .
why can't conjoined twins be brothers and sisters
The twins were conjoined when they were born.
There are several websites that have photos of conjoined twins. Zimbo has a section for them as well as the WellSphere site. The media gallery of USA Today has a photo retrospective section of different conjoined twins dating bask to 1930. Environmental Graffiti has a limited but impressive selection of photos.
Conjoined twins are categorized by a set of adjectives ending with the suffix "-pagus" from the Greek word for "fixed". Early teratologists such as Ambroise Pare and Geoffrey St. Hillaire were among the first to identify and name the various types of conjoined twins. Many actual sets of twins do not fit perfectly into any of these classifications, and the terms are often combined to describe these twins.
Conjoined twins are categorized by a set of adjectives ending with the suffix "-pagus" from the Greek word for "fixed". Early teratologists such as Ambroise Pare and Geoffrey St. Hillaire were among the first to identify and name the various types of conjoined twins. Many actual sets of twins do not fit perfectly into any of these classifications, and the terms are often combined to describe these twins.
There is Identical twins, Nonidentical twins and Conjoined twins.
Craniopagus twins are conjoined twins who are attached at the head.
Just that, female conjoined twins. In some languages all nouns have gender, so in French, Les Jumelles Siamesienne, the enne suffix would mean female. By the way, conjoined twins, being also identical twins, are always the same gender.
Twins that are born connected are called conjoined twins. There are different kinds of conjoined twins, including thoracopagus, omphalopagus, and craniophagus twins, While thoracopagus twins are connected at the torso's top portion and can share one heart, omphalopagus twins are joined from the breastbone to the waist and share a liver. Craniophagus twins are connected at the head region.