As strange as it might sound, it is possible, rare, but possible. The twins would probably die very early though.
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.
If they share a brain then they only have one set of thoughts.
No one knows. conjoined twins have been around as long as humans have, more than one million years.The first famous confirmed case of conjoined twins were Chang and Eng Bunker.
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.
Not necessarily. Conjoined twins may die at different times depending on the specific circumstances of their health and medical conditions. It is possible for one twin to die before the other in certain situations.
Conjoined twins typically have separate brains and nervous systems, so they can feel sensations on their respective sides of the body like two independent individuals. Each twin will have sensation on their own side of the body because they each have their own set of nerves and sensory pathways.
Its possible. My great-uncle and great-aunt were twins. I could have been a twin, but I am not.
Abby and Brittany Hensel, conjoined twins, have separate reproductive systems and individual experiences of pleasure. While they share a body and may have a unique perspective on intimacy, they each have their own distinct physical sensations and emotional responses. Therefore, their experience of sexual pleasure would be independent, shaped by their individual preferences and feelings.
Buildings
The movie is set in Germany, no doubt because the idea for the movie was partially inspired by the unspeakably horrific "experiments" carried out by the supremely evil Nazi doctor, Josef Mengele. Undoubtedly, this is also why the mad doctor, Dr. Heiter, is a respected surgeon renowned for his work in separating conjoined (Siamese) twins. Dr. Mengele did experiments with twins, as well, but he did the opposite of what the fictional Dr. Heiter did: he sewed non-conjoined twins together. From what I've read, they screamed in agony for a few days, and then they died. The specific idea, however, was created when writer/director Tom Six made a joke about punishing child molestors by stitching their mouth to the anus "of a fat truck driver."
Identical twins are born when a single fertilized egg splits and develops into two fetuses. Fraternal twins are born when two separate eggs are released and fertilized. Identical twins take a long time to separate within the womb, and sometimes they don't separate entirely (conjoined twins). If doctors observe the two fetuses are connected at any point, that means identical twins. You can also do a DNA test on the amniotic fluid surrounding the fetuses. If there are two sets of DNA present, it means fraternal twins. If there is only one unique set of DNA, it means identical twins.