That would be the womb, also called the uterus (YOU tuhr-uss)
You develop in your mother's Uterus.
womb
In plants embryo develops in new seedling and in animals it develops into feotus which later develops into baby
a baby develops in the uterus not in the mothers stomach a baby is a ball off cells at the begging and each Little cell will delope into skin hair nose eyes etc.
Describes the side-lying (where the baby's body length is horizontal in the uterus) position of the baby before birth. Unless moved, the baby will have to be delivered by c-section.
Fertilized egg that becomes a baby.
Gestation
The Uterus
The organ where the developing fetus resides is called the uterus. This is where the fetus grows and matures inside the female.
the womb
nothing, it is a miscarriage.
It is the muscular organ unique to female placental mammals about a size of a clenched fist where a baby develops. It is very elastic and expands dramatically as the baby grows. The pear shaped muscular in the reproductive organ from the menstruate from females and it a normal develops pregnancy.
From concepton until birth, the baby develops in its mother's womb.
After 9 months in the mothers stomach ,it might not be exactly.Sometimes people are born way before. the 9 months. Babies do NOT grow in the mother's stomach. The stomach is an organ of the digestive system. A baby grows and develops in the mother's uterus, a reproductive organ. Human gestation is approximately 40 weeks, or 10 months after conception.
The thoracic and sacral curvatures are obvious at birth. The cervical curvature develops when a baby begins to hold its head up independently, and the lumbar curvature develops when the baby learns to walk.
As the fetus develops within the womb all organ systems are being developed. While the systems are premature at birth they are there. A newborn baby has muscles although they are small. Without muscle the baby would not be able to move. As the infant learns to sit, crawl and eventually walk he or she will make these muscles stronger.
No.
No, from before birth.
Postpartum thyroiditis, a form of silent thyroiditis, develops in 5-9% of all women who have recently given birth. Postpartum thyroiditis develops within a year of the baby's birth and disappears within six months.