Yes. The number of days your period lasts has nothing to do if you can get pregnant or not.
About once every 28 days. However, there may be differences between one woman and another, and between one period and another for the same woman.
No,I don't think so
The shortest "month" of the Gregorian calendar has 28 days.
there are either 30 or 30 days in a month depending on which month it is
There is no month that has 32 days.
About once every 28 days. However, there may be differences between one woman and another, and between one period and another for the same woman.
Yes, your period isn't determined by the calendar date but is determined by your menstrual cycle - if your menstrual cycle was only 21 days long then you could menstruate on the first of the month, then again on the twentyfirst of the month.
It means that you need to stop trying to conceive and learn the basics of how your reproductive system works. You don't get two periods in one month, unless you're looking at one at the start of the month and one at the end of the month due to a cycle under 30 days, not all vaginal bleeding is menstruation. Trying to conceive does not change your cycle so that's irrelevant.
Usually anywhere from three to five days.
If you had concieved then implantation occurs around 14 days after conception, around the time you'd have been due to menstruate. How many days into your menstrual cycle that is depends on your menstrual cycle.
When you menstruate is determined by your menstrual cycle, a domino effect of hormonal changes that trigger ovulation and in turn if you don't become pregnant will then trigger menstruation. When you menstruate has no relation to the date on the calendar, which is a man-made way to track time.
no
It is biologically impossible to menstruate if you were pregnant.
For every woman it is different. If you have a 28 day cycle then typically you ovulate (release an egg) 14 days after the first day of your cycle. Then, we assume that four days before to four days after THAT day are fertile days. That is when a woman can conceive.
Typically, a woman of childbearing age should menstruate every 28 days or so unless she is pregnant or moving into menopause.
A woman has her menstrual flow during menstruation, which is at the start of her menstrual cycle. The typical menstrual cycle is around 28 days, meaning she should menstruate roughly every month.
The menstrual cycle is the reproductive cycle, this is when a female would conceive - I think you mean two days after her period. Yes, a female can conceive two days after her period if her cycle is short.