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2006-07-15 09:50:24 · 18 answers · asked by gcfcjohn 2 in Health Men's Health

18 answers

So you know where to aim when your firing???so you know the back from the front in the dark ???

2006-07-15 09:55:47 · answer #1 · answered by she wolf. 4 · 3 2

As a fetus, we all develop the same parts. Some of those change during development into male or female parts, and some change at puberty. Men not only have nipples, but they have breast tissue as well. Because they do not have the effects of estrogen at puberty, they don't grow much in the way of breasts.

2006-07-15 09:53:30 · answer #2 · answered by Pangolin 7 · 0 0

To tell you the truth, nobody really knows. The best explanation I've been able to find (and frankly it doesn't explain very much) is that nipples aren't a sex-linked characteristic. In other words, nipples are just one of those sexually neutral pieces of equipment, like arms or brains, that humans get regardless of sex.

As you may know, every human being gets a unique set of 23 pairs of chromosomes at conception. These fall into two categories. One pair of chromosomes determines sex--the XX combination means you become female, the XY combination means you become male.

The other 22 pairs, the non-sex chromosomes (they're called autosomes), supply what we might call the standard equipment that all humans get. These 22 pairs constitute an all-purpose genetic blueprint that in effect is programmed for either maleness or femaleness by the sex chromosomes. The programming is done by the hormones secreted by the sex glands.

For example, the autosomes give you a voice box, while the sex hormones determine whether it's going to be a deep male voice or a high female voice. Similarly, the autosomes give you nipples, and the sex hormones determine whether said nipples are going to be functioning (in females) or not (in males).

One interesting consequence of the developmental set-up just described is that during the very early stages of fetal life, before the sex hormones have had a chance to do their stuff, all humans are basically bisexual. Among other things, you have two sets of primitive plumbing--one male, one female. Only one set develops into a mature urogenital system, but you retain traces of the other for the rest of your life.

It's tempting, therefore, to say that male nipples are yet another vestige of your carefree bisexual youth. Trouble is, male nipples are hardly vestigial. They're full-sized and fully equipped with blood vessels, nerves, and all the usual appurtenances of functioning organs. Why this should be so nobody knows--in some other mammals, such as rats and mice, male nipple development is completely suppressed by the male sex hormones. (Incidentally, don't start thinking that at one time our human male ancestors must have suckled their young. So far as anybody knows, male lactation has never developed in any mammalian species.)

Human nipples appear in the third or fourth week of development, well before the sex characteristics. (The sex hormones start to assert themselves at seven weeks.) As many as seven pairs of nipples are arranged along either side of a "milk line," a ridge of skin that runs from the upper chest to the navel.

Normally only one pair amounts to anything, but on about one baby in a hundred you can detect some vestige of the other ones, usually on the order of a freckle. There are cases of women who ended up with an extra breast, which made them freak show candidates not so many years ago. Luckily today the women can avail themselves of corrective surgery while the rest of us can watch Jenny Jones.

Anyway, both male and female babies are born with the main milk ducts intact--the gland that produces milk is there in the male, but it remains undeveloped unless stimulated by the female hormone, estrogen. Occasionally, a male baby is born with enough of his mother's estrogen in his body to produce a bizarre phenomenon known as "witches' milk," with the male glands, suitably stimulated, pumping away at the moment of birth.

2006-07-15 10:49:57 · answer #3 · answered by twofingers_69 3 · 0 0

when the baby is developing in the womb the sex is not decided untill late on and thats why the baby forms nipples weather they are male or female

2006-07-15 09:54:01 · answer #4 · answered by baldyhugsblues 5 · 0 0

For pleasure. Have you ever rubbed your nipples? Wow does it feel good. One little touch sends my penis into throbbing ecstasy.

2006-07-15 13:05:51 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

cos when the nipples are handed out, you are not yet male or female.

2006-07-15 09:52:49 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

At conception, we are neither sex. So all have nipples.

2006-07-15 10:01:48 · answer #7 · answered by Lindy357 3 · 0 0

Because you're born with them its a part of the anatomy

2006-07-16 12:46:13 · answer #8 · answered by no1charmerlondon 3 · 0 0

So we can bleed out of them after running a long distance.

2006-07-15 09:54:38 · answer #9 · answered by SG22 3 · 0 0

Sensory pleasure!

2006-07-15 09:53:37 · answer #10 · answered by Quasimojo 3 · 0 0

without them there would be nowhere for the nipple clamps...

2006-07-15 13:25:54 · answer #11 · answered by d_oc22 2 · 0 0

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