No
No, the condom is used to stop a preexisting STD from passing from one person to another.
As long as your partner remains faithful, the risk is about zero.
It would be very difficult to, unless you were having unprotected sex with other people - But, it's always good to be safe in everything you do. My advice is the only way to be sure is to not do it at all - But, that's no fun. So, use a condom.
Hope this helped your question
I'll go ahead and say no. STD's are like any other disease, like the flu - you can't catch the flu without coming into contact with the flu virus, and similarly you can't just develop an STD through the act of sex if neither of you have a pre-existing STD. Still, it can't hurt for you and your partner to be tested for STD's anyways.
One of the partners MUST have an STD in order to get an STD .
how else would you get an STD?
also
toilet seats are highly contaminated
as well as my balls.. that i rub everywhere
You can NOT get an STD if the other person doesn't have one.
HOWEVER
Some STDs - especially chlamydia in men, and HPV (genital warts), and scarily, HIV - do not always show any symptoms at all. So you could get chlamydia (with symptoms) from someone who doesn't know they have it, because they have no symptoms
That is why you should get tested regularly, even if everything is healthy down there because otherwise you could pass diseases on to people you care about
No, but you will get that girl pregant. So I advise you wear a condom if you're not married.
if you do not have an std and your partner does not either then the worst thing that can happen is pregnancy
For the conditions that are described, you would not get a STD.
The is no, with one exception. A person with cold sores (oral herpes) who performs oral sex on someone else can give them genital herpes.
In addition, there are not tests available for all STDs. For instance, a person can't get tested to prove that they don't have HPV or molluscum. Both of these can infect someone without causing symptoms, and can be spread by genital-genital contact (you don't have to have sex to get it). Both of these are not well-prevented with condoms, since they can infect parts of the body that aren't covered by the condom.
So, the simple is no, but the more complete is a little more complicated. First, how do you know that you and your partner don't have an STD? Second, how will you prevent spreading oral herpes to the genitals?
If you do not have an STD, you cannot transmit one to someone else. However, it is possible and quite common for someone to have an STD and not know it. The most common symptom of all STDs is no symptom at all - STDs can remain asymptomatic in one's system for years. If you have an asymptomatic STD, you can still transmit it to someone else, and there's no guarantee the STD will remain asymptomatic in that individual.
The only way to know for sure is to get tested regularly (before and after each new partner) as part of your safer sex regimen.
To get an STD - or any contagious disease, for that matter - somehow, the microbes have to get from an infected person to you. They don't just appear out of nowhere.
people say there are no dumb questions, but this question is really idiotic.
STD is a sexually transmitted disease. It requires at least one person to have the disease before it can be transmitted to the other person. So, in this case, since neither of you have had or currently have STD, then neither one of you can give it to the other during sexual relations, so in that respect, neither of you will get STD.
STD means sexually transmitted disease. Those are caused by microorganisms (bacteria, viruses), and can only be transmitted from an infected person to one that is not. However, you should still be careful, in the sense that you can't always know for sure whether the other person is infected..
NO. Sex does not cause sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), it transmits them. BUT -- and this is the big one -- the only way to be sure neither of you has an STD is to get tested. Believe it or not, there are people out there who think "having sex" only refers to heterosexual penis-vagina intercourse.
if you have both been tested negative 2 STDS and Aids. u will not catch it during unprotected sex! one of you has to have the disease for it to be passed on!
no you cannot get an std there if both of you are std free and just having sex with each other then there is no way to catch anything
No You cannot
You certainly have to get it from somewhere. Usually you get an STD through sexual intercourse with an infected person; less frequently, you can get it through other means. For example, you usually get AIDS through sexual intercourse, but it is also known to have been transmitted by sharing needles for injections. This has been common among drug users, but hospitals, etc. must also be careful to avoid infections. Here, once again, the disease goes from an infected person to one who was not previously infected.
Unless you or your boyfriend have an STD, or get one, there is no chance that you can get one from being clean and safe.
No there is not.
No. If both of them are clean, then they have nothing to give each other during sex.
No, it's not possible.
If you or your partner have NOT engaged in any sexual activity where fluid has been present, then no... you are your partner will not have an STD from having oral sex. If you or your partner have NOT engaged in any sexual activity where fluid has been present, then no... you are your partner will not have an STD from having oral sex.
STD's are transferred from one partner to another through bodily fluids released during sex.
Then there are no risks.
i would tell him right away ...
nopeNo. It is an STD contracted by genital to genital contact.
Yes!
Yes it is safe as long as your partner is STD free.
are you for real? of course not!! (although if you never pee again after having sex once then that is a problem but it doesnt mean you have an std!)
Not Sure mine doesnt seem to have one 2004 HDI but the handbook shows there is.
People with STDs should not have sex and should inform their partner of their disease.
It doesnt always affect both people. dont ask why, it just doesnt.
Yes, in 1991 Hugh had Syphillis that he got from an unknown partner that he chooses not to name.