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The embryo/fetus would die.
This wouldn't happen. Ovulation occurs around two weeks before menstruation, if fertilisation occurs the egg travels down the fallopian tubes to implant in the uterus, pregnancy hormones act to present menstruation so that the zygote/embryo isn't lost. Some women can have a shorter luteal phase (the phase where the fertilised egg would travel to the uterus and implant) which may mean that there isn't enough time for the pregnancy hormones to act to prevent menstruation, thus the pregnancy wouldn't occur. But no one would have a luteal phase so short as to cause menstruation straight after ovulation.
The embryo will develop into a foetus in the womb.
If the cells did not specialize than there would be no chick developing.
Much the same as would happen at any other time, but possibly with more mess.
HIV does not prevent menstruation. Women with HIV still have periods.
the force of the particals would prevent you from doing it.
If there is a pathogen in the blood there is a possibility of this happening. however it would happen anyway because the bacteria would be there either way. Having sex during menstruation is not likely to cause any illness under normal circumstance's
we will get a zygote with triploid chromosomal content,but this case is inviable so the embryo will die after a certain period.
The way the anatomy of the female reproductive tract is prevents this. The only way it might happen is if the uterus is removed and the ovaries remain. The egg may end in the vagina. If the egg is excreted into the vagina and if fertilized, the embryo would be lost. If some how the embryo attaches to the wall of the uterus, it would also be lost. There is not enough room for it to grow.
no.
Any animal that hatches from a shell comes from an embryo. Actually any animal at all comes from an embryo. But the most common animal you would think of would be a chick.