The spelling "pregnant" is the correct English spelling.
Fetus is accepted as the correct spelling in most places, whereas foetus is often used in the UK. In fact, the spelling fetus is correctly derived from the latin fetus while foetus is an incorrect application of misunderstood etymology. Thus fetus is the accepted usage in medical literature.
The term endochondral is used to indicate a gradual formation (e.g. bone growth in a human fetus).A similar word is :endocrine (glands) - a classification of human body glands producing regulatory hormones
"Fetal" refers to anything that relates to a fetus. For example, "fetal tissue" is the tissue of a fetus.
It is called a fetus
You spell it orbiting.You spell it orbiting.You spell it orbiting.You spell it orbiting.You spell it orbiting.You spell it orbiting.
The plural word for embryo is embryos.
The connective tissue between the placenta and a developing fetus is the "umbilical cord" (Latin funiculus umbilicalis).
That is the correct spelling of the "umbilical cord" (the conduit between the mother's placenta and a developing fetus).
The letters you've given and in that order do not spell a word. I think you might mean Sonogram, which is a diagnostic medical image often used to check the development of a fetus.
The possessive form of fetus is fetus' or fetus's
Fetal calf, fetus, fetus calf, or cow fetus.
A female fetus with an a y chromosome is what makes it develop differently from a male fetus.
Yes fetus has kidneys
fetus
Fetus
The female fetus has a Y chromosome while the fetus only has two x chromosome.
The same kingdom the animal the fetus will be when it's born, is the kingdom the fetus itself belongs to. A cat fetus is in the Felidae kingdom, for instance.
The uterus is where the fetus develops and the placenta connects the uterus to the fetus.