It all depends on your perspective. It is technically not a parasite since it is of the same species as the woman and it did not crawl inside or choose to attach. Fetuses do not grow on their own and is directly related to the behavior of the woman and/or that of some male. But you can say it is a parasite if the pregnancy is unwanted, since it would be living off of a host with no benefit to the host.
Fetus is name given to human embryo after it is recognizable as human embryo .
nothing.
No, a fetus isn't considered a human being from anyone's perspective but that of someone who is anti-choice. A fetus is a human life but it is not a human being - a woman is a human being, children that could be it's siblings are human beings, and the child the fetus could become is a human being - feminism is concerned with the rights and well-being of human beings.
It depends on the parasite... But see a Dr. anyway.
A host is an organism that the parasite lives on. In other words the parasite may use the host's resources in a negative way. For example: A tick living off the blood of a human. The tick is the parasite and the human is the host. The tick lives off the blood of the human.
No, it is not possible for the human body to expel a fetus through urination. The fetus is typically expelled through the process of childbirth.
Yes; eg: peppermint (host) - human (parasite).
Biologically a fetus is human in that its cells are clealy those of a homo sapiens and not another mammal, and if it successfully continues development a human being will result.AnswerIt is human, but not sentient
Around day 40 of a pregnancy, you can distinguish between a chimpanzee fetus and a human fetus based on their physical characteristics and developmental stages. Chimpanzee fetuses have a shorter gestation period compared to human fetuses.
Fingers and toes develop during the first trimester of pregnancy in a human fetus.
For the first 8 weeks the developing human is called an embryo after that it is called a fetus.
we both take massive dumps.