50%
Sperms fertilizing the egg have two types of sexual chromosomes (y) and (x) and the egg has only one and it's (x).
A boys is XY and a girl is XX
so with a little bit of math a boy's chance is 1/2 :)
You have a 1 in 2 chance of having a girl. No matter how many boys you have had in the past or how many girls you have had in the past, each pregnancy presents the opportunity to have a girl or a boy with a 50% chance. The sperm does not know that it had already produced ,say, 5 boys and needs to produce a girl for you and your partner. So with every pregnancy there is a 50% chance you will have a girl and a 50% chance you will have a boy.
For each pregnancy, there is a 50 percent chance of a boy and a 50 percent chance of a girl baby. So to answer your question the odds are still 50:50.
its 50/50 each pregnancy.
As long as you're menstruating, there's a chance of a natural pregnancy. If you're not menstruating, there's no chance of a natural pregnancy.
Just about 50/50. The sex of earlier children has no bearing on the sex of the next child to be born. Each pregnancy has a (just about) even chance of being a boy or a girl.
Acutally the chances of having a boy are 51% and a girl 49%. The odds stay pretty close to 50% for each child and only vary slightly. If you have had 2 or 3 boys, you are only about 2% to 6% more likely to have another boy. If you have had girls, you are slightly more likely to have a boy next.
Yes. Even when the condoms are used properly, there is still a small (1-3%) chance of pregnancy.
On average, each round of IVF gives a 20-30% chance of pregnancy.
It lowers the chance
Chance doesn't care what's happened before. The odds for each pregnancy is (very close to) 50/50.
no, especially if there was no penetration
If the semen of the male comes in contact with the vagina of a female, there is always a chance of pregnancy.