Yes, the males do, as do most male animals.
The foreskin may also be referred to as the prepuce.
No when they circumcise they remove the foreskin only. Not the penis.
In circumcision of infants, the foreskin is pulled tightly into a specially designed clamp, and the foreskin pulls away from the broadened tip of the penis. Pressure from the clamp stops bleeding from blood vessels that supplied the foreskin
By examination of the word 'long' one would assume the question is referring to a foreskin greater than average. Average foreskin covers the glans of the penis completely when soft. When erect average foreskin typically slides back and exposes some if not all of the glans. If a man has 'long' foreskin, by description alone it suggests that the foreskin is of a greater/longer amount than average. Some men with longer foreskins can have an erection with no exposure of the glans. In other cases the foreskin can be long enough to cover the glans during erection with excess at the tip. Typically the position of the foreskin is dependant upon the elasticity and size of the frenum, which attatches the foreskin to the underside of the glans. The more flexible and abundant the frenum is, the more likely the foreskin is able to slide up and down.
wendell seals are seals in the Antarctic wendell seals are seals in the Antarctic wendell seals are seals in the Antarctic wendell seals are seals in the Antarctic
No, I did not. I thought I would still grow a foreskin.
Harbor seals, Elephant seals, Ross seals, Weddell seals, Antarctica Fur seals, Leopard seals and Navy seals.
Circumcision is the removal of the Prepuce or foreskin from the penis. this is largely a religious practice and there are no medical or health advantages in it except in extremely rare circumstances.
Removal of the foreskin is also referred to as circumcision of men or boys is traditional in a number of cultures, but it is most common in the Jewish tradition from the Brit Milah.
Circumcision
7: elephant seals,harp seals, cabeater seals, ross seals, leopard seals, wendell seals and hooded seals
Various sources give seals a range of collective names: bob of seals colony of seals crash of seals flock of seals harem of seals herd of seals plump of seals pod of seals rookery of seals spring of seals team of seals