The question seems to reflect the common thought among laypeople that there are "male hormones" and "female hormones". Traditionally these roles have been ascribed to testosterone and estrogen/progesterone, respectively. Indeed, the equivalence of testosterone as a "male hormone" is suggested even by early (circa 1930s) scientific descriptions of the chemical: it belongs to a class of hormones called androgens, which is from the Greek andros "man" and genao "to make".
Later work revealed that all sex hormones, including testosterone, the estrogens, and progesterone, are made by both sexes, albeit in different amounts. The notion of a gender-specific hormone was essentially moot.
Essentially, there is at least one example of a gender-specific hormone that's important during human (and primates in general) embryonic development. That's the testis-determining factor (TDF) encoded on the sex-determining region of the Y chromosome (SRY). Because it's encoded on the Y chromosome, only genetic males possess it. Thus TDF can be considered a gender-specific hormone.
I'm curious about the use of the term "gender" in "gender-specific" as opposed to the term "sex", as in "sex-specific". I think the latter would be more correct, as we're talking about biological sex and not gender identity.
A sentence with the word hormones could be 1.) Men have a higher amount of hormones than women 2.) Men and women have the hormones
There are two main hormones that are responsible for the reproduction. For Men it is Testosterone and for Women it is Estrogen.
growth hormones and the fact that women age slower than men
because women and men alone have different hormones whuch have specific functions to operate.
because they need different hormones for different body parts for e.g boobs and dicks
Women are moody when they are on their period because their hormones are out of whack.
No the hormones most take disrupt the cycle.
hormones
None. Men don't have babies.
Estrogen is probably the most widely known and discussed of all hormones. The term "estrogen" actually refers to any of a group of chemically similar hormones; estrogenic hormones are sometimes mistakenly referred to as exclusively female hormones when in fact both men and women produce them. However, the role estrogen plays in men is not entirely clear.
No. Only women can menstruate, because men, by definition, do not have the required equipment.Men can be influenced by the female menstrual cycle, because women release hormones during their cycles, and men respond to them subconsciously.
For women: Makes the boobs bigger and hips wider, and makes it possbile to give birth. Men: Makes the penis bigger, grows hair and muscles.