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Babies can be delivered at home or in the hospital if it's a complicated birth, such as a casearean. Babies are normally delivered through the vagina after a woman goes into labour, and once she is 10cm dilated, she helps the baby through by pushing really hard.

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12y ago
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6y ago

Humans reproduce sexually. A man and a woman have sex. Then the man ejaculates semen (which contains sperm cells) into the woman's vagina.

The sperm cells then swim to a female's egg and fertalize it. Most of the sperm die off before they get here. For the sperm, getting to the egg is like crossing an expansive no man's land. Except at the end is a giant egg that you bury your face into. Anyway, once the egg is fertilized in the uterus, it begins to grow from a zygote to an embryo to a fetus. Then the female goes through the stages of labor and ultimately pushes the baby out of her vagina.

Now, females release eggs from the fallopian tubes every month. If the egg isn't fertilized, then it, along with the walls of the uterus, are expelled in a process called menstruation.

Human babies are born when they move out of the uterus, through the birth canal (vagina) to the outside world. They will normally be sufficiently developed to breathe and eat (nurse) on their own, and complete their growth and maturity as infants.

More detailed answer:

How a baby came to exist and grow in the womb of is mother is a different question. In humans and other mammals, the baby is conceived (formed as an individual) by the union of two cells : an egg cell from the mother and a sperm cell from the biological father. This is normally done by sexual intercourse.

Babies are born at the end of the process of pregnancy, which begins when a post-pubescent female and post-pubescent male have intercourse (not every act of intercourse will cause pregnancy, only where sperm reach a receptive egg). Intercourse is where the male inserts his penis into the female's vagina. The male thrusts his penis in and out, thus causing sexual tension and then orgasm, which means the male's penis ejaculates sperm. The sperm travels up the vagina, through the cervix and into the uterus and up the fallopian tubes. IF it is the right time of the month, one or more eggs (an ovum) has been released from the ovary. Females have two ovaries, but only one egg a month (usually) is released from one or the other ovary. If the sperm survive the trip and one is still viable (strong, alive) and the egg allows it to be absorbed into its surface, conception occurs and the long process of cell division and implantation begins. The egg travelsfrom the fallopian tubes and implants on the wall of the uterus, and over a period of about 9 months (38 weeks) the fetus grows. When the fetus is fully developed, or sometimes earlier, hormones are released that initiate labor. Contractions begin to expel the fetus/baby. After anywhere from several minutes to several hours, the baby is pushed down the birth canal (vagina) and out of the mother's body.

Sometimes a woman cannot deliver vaginally and then a cesarean section is performed.

This is a surgical intervention where the baby is directly removed through an incision in the abdominal wall.
When the fetus has been in the mother's womb for about nine months it will be ready to come out. The fetus decides when it wants to leave its mother's womb. So when the mother's water breaks, it means the baby wants to come out. You know it is coming out when you have your bloody shell. The baby can't come out by itself so the mother has to help it by pushing. It slowly comes out of the vagina. They come out of the woman's vagina, or they can be taken out by a Caesarean section, or c-section, which is the delivery of a baby through a surgical incision in the mother's abdomen and uterus. In certain circumstances, a c-section is scheduled in advance. In others, it's done in response to an unforeseen complication.
They come out through the birth canal.
Your parents have sex. Then nine months later your mom squeezes you out of her vagina. The end.or if u want details when the sperm reaches the egg in the woman belly (this happens when they are focking then 9 months the woman makes a child)
The following answer is graphic and descriptive.

In humans, the female becomes pregnant when her egg is fertilized by a man's sperm. The fertilized egg implants itself (attaches to) into the uterine wall. The uterus is also called "the womb"; it is an organ in the woman's lower belly. The uterus is mostly made of smooth muscle tissue and it has a very good blood supply. When the egg implants, the attached portion grows and becomes an umbilical cord - this cord goes from the baby's belly to the mother's uterus, and this cord brings all the nutrients from the mother to the baby through the mother's bloodstream. Blood vessels are in the cord. While in the uterus, the fetus is in a special fluid called amniotic fluid. The uterus would look like a balloon filled with water-- but amniotic fluid is not just water; instead it has special nutrients the fetus needs to live.

The fertilized egg quickly begins to divide (cell division) until millions and millions of cells are formed. Each type of cell creates a certain part of the baby's body; for example, bone cells make bones; muscle cells make muscles. While inside the mother's womb, these dividing cells and forming baby is called a fetus. (Doctors don't use the word "baby" until after the baby is born.) The fetus continues to grow inside the uterus for about 9 months (on average). Nine months is about 38 weeks. This period of time is called a "pregnancy".

A baby, though, can be born at different times. If born very early, it may not survive. If born later, it has a better chance to live. Most often, a fetus has no problems and waits until between 7 and 9 months (or more) to be born. If a pregnancy goes more than 8 months (38 weeks), a doctor will induce labor by 40 weeks.

The process of "being born" starts many weeks before the baby actually is born. Hormones in the mother change. The baby starts to move downward, and most babies have to "turn around" in the uterus first. During pregnancy, the baby lays sideways with it's head on one side or the other, or the head is up (almost under the bottom of the mom's ribs). But to be born, it's best if the baby's head is down so the baby is upside down in its mother. Hormones make the muscles in the uterus contract (get tight) and release so it helps the baby turn and get into the right position. When the baby has turned around upside down, doctors say the baby has "dropped". From the outside, people can notice that the mom's belly is now "fatter" at the bottom and less "fat" or round at the top like it had been for many months.

It can take a couple weeks for the baby to turn upside down. While this happens, the mother may have false contractions. In other words, it kind of feels like labor has started but it hasn't really. These muscle contractions come and go, similar to you making a fist with your hand then opening your hand and relaxing. A mother may feel one contraction... then nothing more for days... then another contraction.... and so on.

Finally, though, the contractions start to get stronger and they don't go away. In fact, the contractions start coming closer and closer together (like as if you made a fist, opened your hand...and a few minutes later, make a fist again). Once contractions start, they can go on for many hours. The longest normal delivery can take around 24 hours (a whole day); if the baby isn't born by then, doctors will do surgery to bring the baby out (by C-Section).

So, when a pregnant mom feels contractions, she usually goes to the hospital when the pains are 2 minutes apart (example, it would be like you made a fist and open it, look at a clock and at 2 minutes and then make a first again). At the hospital, nurses help the mother get ready to go through "Labor and Delivery".

"Labor", like I said, can last a long time. In the first hours, the mom can lay in a bed, sit in a chair, or walk around if she wants. Walking helps to keep moving the baby downward. But... the contraction pains get stronger as time goes by. Then, mothers want to lay in a bed because it is more comfortable.

The "balloon" or sac around the baby must "break" before a baby can be born. If it doesn't break on its own, a doctor uses a special instrument to open the sac. It can happen naturally after contractions start. If it happened naturally, a woman says "my water broke"-- the water didn't really break, but the sac broke and then lets the "water" (the amniotic fluid) come out.

After the "water breaks" (or is broken by a doctor), contractions come harder and more frequently. Labor is painful. Many women decide to have medication to lessen the pain; there are different kinds of medicine but it's too much to describe here. The hours go by with the mother having more contractions and the baby moving closer to being outside.

Finally, the mother feels a great need to "push", just like when you need to have a bowel movement. Except, during labor and delivery, it really hurts to push--- but it also hurts to not push. Every mother at this point just wants it to be over. She just wants the pain to stop and for her baby to be born.

During these hours of labor, nurses and doctors check the mother and baby frequently. Finally, the baby's head "crowns". Crowning means that a nurse / doctor or the baby's daddy can see the top of the baby's head starting to come out. The doctor makes a special incision to give more room for the baby's head to come out. While he makes the incision, the mother should not push.

But after the incision, the mother is strongly instructed to "Push!" Usually it only takes a few hard pushes before a baby is fully born. Some women have to push more than other women.

In a normal birth (normal being "head first"), the head comes out first. The mother then pants instead of pushing so the doctor can help rotate the baby a little in order to make one shoulder come out next. When the baby's head and one shoulder are out, the other shoulder slides out, followed by the baby's body.

A nurse helps by quickly suctioning fluid / mucous out of the baby's nose and mouth. The doctor may swat the baby's behind to make him/her cry, if the baby hasn't cried yet. The "cry" means the baby has taken its first big gulp of air, which is why doctors want the baby to cry. Other doctors might flick the baby on its foot to stir the baby to cry.

Quickly the doctor will first clamp and then cut (or the baby's father is instructed how to cut) the umbilical cord. Cutting the cord does NOT cause the baby or mother any pain. The baby is then put onto a specially warmed bed, wiped dry, weighed and measured, and special ointment is put into both eyes to protect from disease. A nurse or doctor will perform quick tests called an APGAR score; this score tells how well the baby looks medically and how well he/she is responding. For example, if the mom had medications the baby might be sedated (sleepy) and might not cry vigorously, so the APGAR might be a lower score. Doctors re-do the APGAR after 5 minutes.

By then, the baby has been wrapped in a blanket and a knit cap is put on its head to prevent heat loss, and the baby is brought back to its mother to hold or even to breast feed for the first time.

There are many variables, many differences in each baby's birth. What I described above is a birth with no problems or emergencies. Every pregnancy and every "labor and delivery" is different, though. While doctors and nurses follow certain set procedures or ways of doing things for a normal birth (no problems), there are other ways of doing things if a problem happens. Doctors and nurses watch for problems they know could develop and try to prevent the problems from happening. One common problem is the need for surgery called a C-Section.

If you have questions after reading this, please ask your parents or family doctor.
The baby comes out the vagina.
It comes right out of there butt and then there is a live or dead baby. It is happier when it is alive though. I am the oldest in the family. Besides MOM and DAD. :l
They come out of the vagina... Yeah. Ew. and ouch. But it is a beautiful thing somehow anyway
The pregnant mother pops the baby out of her vagina by pushing and pushing until she screams and she eventually haves the baby.
That is just a wrong question!! It's just wrong! If you think it not check it up on YouTube.

Well when your mom gave birth to you she started off in the house she has to wait until water comes out of her vagina if blood and water come out then its either the following reasons.

1: your on your period

2: your giving birth to early

3: your baby will be premature

4: you've got bowl cancer or any other problems in that area

hope i have helped

Then she gets rushed to hospital. Then if they think its serious they get you to lie on a bed in a room and give birth straight away. Its stressing at first because you have to keep pushing but you get use to it.

If your mom cant give birth then they use a special tool , they pushed it up your moms vagina and then with the end bit they claw on to the baby's head and pull. Once the baby is out they wait for it to cry usually it cries straight away if it doesn't its because it has trouble to breathe which usually causes the baby to have problems when they are older like reading and writing. If they are premature then they go in an incubator (a glass box with loads of wires.).


If its natural, then through her vagina. If there's a complication, such as the baby isn't getting enough oxygen, then it can be delivered through a C-section. Which a doctor performs by cutting open the lower torso and through the placenta.
If you are asking whether the baby is born head-first or feet-first, the answer is typically head-first. Some babies are born buttocks if the mother has what is called a breach birth, during which the baby turns around in the womb.
relax! that's most important. and be strong. and pray.

okay, you just start relaxing and pushing with the contractions. try to walk around a bit if the baby is really hard to push out. lay down. spread legs out and push. If you can she the baby's head then you're pretty close to seeing your baby! push down and strain. there's the baby.
First, you must be female. Second, it will come out of a females uterus. Thirdly, it will hurt.... A lot.

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9y ago

Maybe you are asking why was I born ? Lots of different answers depending on who you ask. A man and a woman had sex and 9 months later, more or less, you popped out. How, why ? Cell division causing an egg to develop into you. Why ? No one can really answer that one. Religion has one answer or several depending on which religion you are asking. Science has another. Bottom line, no one really can answer it.

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8y ago

About a month before a woman is due to deliver her baby, the baby turns in the uterus so it is head down and the baby "drops" down so it's head rests between the mother's pelvic bones. The pregnant woman suddenly has more room to breathe (before that the baby interfered with the diaphragm and made breathing difficult so the mom got shortness of breath when walking or climbing stairs). However, the woman can then have more urinary urgency because the baby is pressing more on the woman's bladder.

About the same time that the baby drops in the uterus, the mom can also experience Braxton-Hicks contractions. These occur because of changes in the levels of pregnancy hormones. The contractions are like "test" contractions and often occur when the mom is active-- like cleaning the house, doing the laundry, etc. But these test contractions are false labor. They are not strong enough or long enough or sustained enough to push out a baby.


When real contractions begin, the muscle contractions become regular, longer, and repeated. When contractions are two minutes apart, the baby could come anytime between 1 hour to 24 hours from then (depends if she had a baby before or if it is her first baby). Most moms go through labor for a lengthy period of time---many hours.

In a regular, uncomplicated birth, the baby's head comes first, pushed downward and out the vagina with stronger contractions and the mother's urge to push. The head is the widest portion of the baby except for the shoulders. The head delivers, then one shoulder, then the other shoulder. At that point, the rest of the baby's body practically slides out.


A birth is much more involved than this description, but it would take many pages to write all the details.

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13y ago

The following answer is graphic and descriptive.

In humans, the female becomes pregnant when her egg is fertilized by a man's sperm. The fertilized egg implants itself (attaches to) into the uterine wall. The uterus is also called "the womb"; it is an organ in the woman's lower belly. The uterus is mostly made of smooth muscle tissue and it has a very good blood supply. When the egg implants, the attached portion grows and becomes an umbilical cord - this cord goes from the baby's belly to the mother's uterus, and this cord brings all the nutrients from the mother to the baby through the mother's bloodstream. Blood vessels are in the cord. While in the uterus, the fetus is in a special fluid called amniotic fluid. The uterus would look like a balloon filled with water-- but amniotic fluid is not just water; instead it has special nutrients the fetus needs to live.

The fertilized egg quickly begins to divide (cell division) until millions and millions of cells are formed. Each type of cell creates a certain part of the baby's body; for example, bone cells make bones; muscle cells make muscles. While inside the mother's womb, these dividing cells and forming baby is called a fetus. (Doctors don't use the word "baby" until after the baby is born.) The fetus continues to grow inside the uterus for about 9 months (on average). Nine months is about 38 weeks. This period of time is called a "pregnancy".

A baby, though, can be born at different times. If born very early, it may not survive. If born later, it has a better chance to live. Most often, a fetus has no problems and waits until between 7 and 9 months (or more) to be born. If a pregnancy goes more than 8 months (38 weeks), a doctor will induce labor by 40 weeks.

The process of "being born" starts many weeks before the baby actually is born. Hormones in the mother change. The baby starts to move downward, and most babies have to "turn around" in the uterus first. During pregnancy, the baby lays sideways with it's head on one side or the other, or the head is up (almost under the bottom of the mom's ribs). But to be born, it's best if the baby's head is down so the baby is upside down in its mother. Hormones make the muscles in the uterus contract (get tight) and release so it helps the baby turn and get into the right position. When the baby has turned around upside down, doctors say the baby has "dropped". From the outside, people can notice that the mom's belly is now "fatter" at the bottom and less "fat" or round at the top like it had been for many months.

It can take a couple weeks for the baby to turn upside down. While this happens, the mother may have false contractions. In other words, it kind of feels like labor has started but it hasn't really. These muscle contractions come and go, similar to you making a fist with your hand then opening your hand and relaxing. A mother may feel one contraction... then nothing more for days... then another contraction.... and so on.

Finally, though, the contractions start to get stronger and they don't go away. In fact, the contractions start coming closer and closer together (like as if you made a fist, opened your hand...and a few minutes later, make a fist again). Once contractions start, they can go on for many hours. The longest normal delivery can take around 24 hours (a whole day); if the baby isn't born by then, doctors will do surgery to bring the baby out (by C-Section).

So, when a pregnant mom feels contractions, she usually goes to the hospital when the pains are 2 minutes apart (example, it would be like you made a fist and open it, look at a clock and at 2 minutes and then make a first again). At the hospital, nurses help the mother get ready to go through "Labor and Delivery".

"Labor", like I said, can last a long time. In the first hours, the mom can lay in a bed, sit in a chair, or walk around if she wants. Walking helps to keep moving the baby downward. But... the contraction pains get stronger as time goes by. Then, mothers want to lay in a bed because it is more comfortable.

The "balloon" or sac around the baby must "break" before a baby can be born. If it doesn't break on its own, a doctor uses a special instrument to open the sac. It can happen naturally after contractions start. If it happened naturally, a woman says "my water broke"-- the water didn't really break, but the sac broke and then lets the "water" (the amniotic fluid) come out.

After the "water breaks" (or is broken by a doctor), contractions come harder and more frequently. Labor is painful. Many women decide to have medication to lessen the pain; there are different kinds of medicine but it's too much to describe here. The hours go by with the mother having more contractions and the baby moving closer to being outside.

Finally, the mother feels a great need to "push", just like when you need to have a bowel movement. Except, during labor and delivery, it really hurts to push--- but it also hurts to not push. Every mother at this point just wants it to be over. She just wants the pain to stop and for her baby to be born.

During these hours of labor, nurses and doctors check the mother and baby frequently. Finally, the baby's head "crowns". Crowning means that a nurse / doctor or the baby's daddy can see the top of the baby's head starting to come out. The doctor makes a special incision to give more room for the baby's head to come out. While he makes the incision, the mother should not push.

But after the incision, the mother is strongly instructed to "Push!" Usually it only takes a few hard pushes before a baby is fully born. Some women have to push more than other women.

In a normal birth (normal being "head first"), the head comes out first. The mother then pants instead of pushing so the doctor can help rotate the baby a little in order to make one shoulder come out next. When the baby's head and one shoulder are out, the other shoulder slides out, followed by the baby's body.

A nurse helps by quickly suctioning fluid / mucous out of the baby's nose and mouth. The doctor may swat the baby's behind to make him/her cry, if the baby hasn't cried yet. The "cry" means the baby has taken its first big gulp of air, which is why doctors want the baby to cry. Other doctors might flick the baby on its foot to stir the baby to cry.

Quickly the doctor will first clamp and then cut (or the baby's father is instructed how to cut) the umbilical cord. Cutting the cord does NOT cause the baby or mother any pain. The baby is then put onto a specially warmed bed, wiped dry, weighed and measured, and special ointment is put into both eyes to protect from disease. A nurse or doctor will perform quick tests called an APGAR score; this score tells how well the baby looks medically and how well he/she is responding. For example, if the mom had medications the baby might be sedated (sleepy) and might not cry vigorously, so the APGAR might be a lower score. Doctors re-do the APGAR after 5 minutes.

By then, the baby has been wrapped in a blanket and a knit cap is put on its head to prevent heat loss, and the baby is brought back to its mother to hold or even to breast feed for the first time.

There are many variables, many differences in each baby's birth. What I described above is a birth with no problems or emergencies. Every pregnancy and every "labor and delivery" is different, though. While doctors and nurses follow certain set procedures or ways of doing things for a normal birth (no problems), there are other ways of doing things if a problem happens. Doctors and nurses watch for problems they know could develop and try to prevent the problems from happening. One common problem is the need for surgery called a C-Section.

If you have questions after reading this, please ask your parents or family doctor.

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12y ago

From the vagina at a hospital with a nurses help.

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