its through hereidity
Just that, female conjoined twins. In some languages all nouns have gender, so in French, Les Jumelles Siamesienne, the enne suffix would mean female. By the way, conjoined twins, being also identical twins, are always the same gender.
Conjoined children can be connected at any body part. So yes, they can be conjoined by testicles.
Because usually when you have conjoined twins their side by side or back to back. So where would it go? But maybe its possible.
No, they have separate nervous systems. However the circulatory and digestive tracts ae intelocked and in series, so to speak. One has digestive problems, so does the other.
No. Conjoined twins are always identical twins, and never just fraternal twins. Identical twins come from a single embryo that splits. In the case of conjoined twins, a complete split never occurs. So when they come from the same embryo, they are always the same gender.
They go and get them fit for them bye a Taylor .
Conjoined twins are basically two beings made from the one egg or cell, and this egg has not broken apart properly, and so the twins have been fused together. They may share the same organs - like brain, shoulder, heart, leg...etc. Sometimes they are separated in order to be able to live separate lives.
boy, girl and simese twins Siamese twins are now properly called conjoined twins. You can have identical twins[ same sex] , fraternal twins [ one male , one female ]. triplets, same way, quadruplets, quintuplists , sextuplets and so on , with fertility drugs.
Conjoined twins are identical but attached to each other and may share organs depending where they are attached to the others body. Conjoined twins are attached because the egg cells have not separated properly in the mothers womb.
Generally fraternal twins are more common. For fraternal twins to occur twins must diverge, but differentiate upon becoming separate entities. Identical twins are rarer, in which the two siblings are of the same gender and are exactly alike upon birth. Rarer so are conjoined, or "Siamese" twins. This occurs when twins are born partially or extremely fused together. There is only a 25% survival chance for a conjoined twin. Most were only connected by gristle and flesh, and could have been easily separated easily, were they in modern society.
They are combined physically but are still two separate people, so two certificates.
The "first" conjoined, or siamiese twins were Chang and Eng Bunker, from Siam (current Thailand). They were born in 1811, and are said to be first, altough there are two other earlier cases. The earliest are so-called "Biddenen Maids", Mary and Eliza Chulkhurst, born in England in 1100. They were said to be conjoined from the hip, but sometimes also from the shoulders. Of course, there are earlier cases, but these are the first to have known names.