Not really. It will not taste pleasant, and if they swallow enough it can cause a brief stint of diarrhea, but it is not dangerous and will quickly pass.
No. If it is a mother, that infers that the organism is female. The feature that determines gender is the 23rd set of chromosomes. A female can only result if the pair is XX (XY results in a male). Therefore, a mother cannot pass on a Y chromosome to her child. If you are wondering whether by cause of a genetic mutation the mother happens to have a Y chromosome, then she would not be a mother, as she would be infertile.
The stomach would fill with air and cause the child to vomit.
She would have to repeat 3 grade
Yes, but this is not the main cause for all cases. Others can be genetic or birth defects during pregnancy.
The child's pregnancy would not, in itself, be cause for terminating support.
No it would not.
cause its an awesome name
If they can reach the pedals, yes. That is as long as the team allows it. The child would also have to pass the medical test.
To answer this question, one would need to know how this came to pass. Did you "give" the child to them at some point? Did the State place the child with them?
When a couple is not legally married they have no statutory rights in the other's estate. Their separate property would pass to the child. Any property held as joint tenants with the right of survivorship would pass to the survivor.
chicken pox