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2006-08-09 00:18:01 · 43 answers · asked by bigboobs1@btinternet.com 2 in Family & Relationships Singles & Dating

43 answers

Because they really want to be a girl. Ha Ha

2006-08-09 00:22:14 · answer #1 · answered by top momma 3 · 1 1

Not nipples alone but everything a lady has or vice versa. Because of the proper targeting of the same Sex hormones, some have the organs of that sex well developed and the others in miniature form.
Nipples are centres where there are millions of sensory nerve centres. When a body comes in to contact the stimulus has to be sent from all parts of the body to give an exhilarating experience. Thus the cheeks, neck, ears,nipples, navel, the organs, the thighs, the foot all are to be i in contact to have an influx of sensory stimuli to give you the exact emotion to the contact.Now you know why embracing is needed!!!

2006-08-09 00:26:16 · answer #2 · answered by THE WORRIER 4 · 0 0

There is a certain gland that is responsible with the mother breast feeding. The men also had that gland, but it is asleep. You might laugh, but i red about some extreme cases, when the father and the baby survived in the mountains or in the desert and he put the little baby to his nipple and the baby sucked, and the gland start to work, and the men had milk just until he managed to be saved.Apparently, because of the fear of not losing his baby by starvation.

2006-08-09 00:26:52 · answer #3 · answered by Gersin 5 · 0 0

Why do men have nipples? To prove they're mammals, obviously. The distinguishing features of mammals, from whales to mice, are two: having hair and suckling their offspring. This gives us the notorious sentence that demonstrates why our pronouns need overhauling: "Man is an animal who suckles his young."

Clearly, if men didn't have nipples, to demonstrate their theoretical membership in the La Leche League, we could only identify them as mammals by their hairiness. And where would that leave bald guys? What are they, reptiles?

There are some male mammals without nipples, a fact I was alerted to by Aristotle, who wrote "Such, for instance, is the case with horses, some stallions being destitute of these parts."

Since Aristotle's medical facts were sometimes a bit wobbly -- he said cabbage cures hangovers -- I called an equine veterinarian. "I have never seen a stallion with nipples," she declared flatly. "And I have looked around down there." As far as I know, she's never seen a bald stallion, either, so that's how they avoid being called reptiles.

The veterinarian pointed out that a mare's two nipples are located toward the tail end of the body, as opposed to the chic head-end location in humans. This, she daintily hinted, might be why stallions don't exhibit nipples. "There's no room."

These shocking facts sent me on a quest for other data on animal nipples or, as medical types have long preferred to say, mammae. Male nipples? Mammae masculinae. (If you need to be even more obscure you can also call a nipple a mamilla or a thelium.)

My mother, when I told her of my research, may have been hinting that there were more hard-hitting stories I could be working on by bringing up the folk analogy "as useless as **** on a boar hog." My research appears to indicate that boar hogs do in fact have ****. Which they are not known to use.

Not only do male platypuses not have nipples, neither do females. The milk simply flows out through pores and is licked up by baby platypuses. And while platypuses are not actually categorized as reptiles, you'll notice that people are always talking about how "primitive" they are and making fun of their noses.

I would have assumed that nipples were only available in even numbers had I not learned that female possums, for example, have between seven and 25 nipples. The delightful Virginia opossum, which inhabits the middles of American roads and highways, usually has 13, efficiently arranged in an open circle with one in the center. This information should not tempt you to snicker and point the next time you see a possum: They also have 50 teeth.

Most mammals, however, stick to even numbers of nipples, and often the males get to have them too. In addition to boar hogs, dogs, cats, all primates and many other animals feature the mamma masculina.

It seems that human embryos develop mammary tissue before they bother to check on whether they're going to be male or female and start modifying the basic plan with surges of this or that hormone. After only a few weeks, milk ridges form -- two stripes of tissue that start in the armpits, curve out over the chest, go straight down the stomach and then veer in toward the groin, ending somewhere high on each thigh. Later the milk ridges regress to some extent, usually leaving us with just two nipples.

Quite a few people end up with an extra, or supernumerary nipple somewhere along the trail of the milk ridge, however. (One man had five.) Sometimes they can't be mistaken for anything but a nipple, and other times they look like a mole. In fact, many people with supernumerary nipples don't know they have them until some officious and informative person starts examining their moles. Extras often run in families -- Darwin cites two brothers who each had a supernumerary nipple. Anyone who thinks that's weird should immediately leave the room and go check his or her torso for moles. How do you know you're not head-to-foot extra nipples and we've all just been too polite to mention it?

2006-08-09 00:21:27 · answer #4 · answered by rrrevils 6 · 1 0

This is a biology question really.

A man is a mutated woman. Nothing wrong with that of course but basically men and women have all the same bits (apart from ovaries and testicles which just produce a different kind of cell.)

For example, the scrotum is the same material as the outer labia, the clitoris is the same material as the glans penis, etc.

2006-08-09 00:55:05 · answer #5 · answered by Fluorescent 4 · 0 0

Because before the gender of the baby inside the womb is determined, nipples are there just incase it will be female.

2006-08-09 00:24:09 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Its just a genetic thing common to both sexes, otherwise women would have to grow nipples as well.

2006-08-09 00:22:07 · answer #7 · answered by neorapsta 4 · 0 0

Why Do women Have Booobs? dats Just How men re, Sum Gals even Loook Man Booobs(( Lol)

2006-08-09 00:24:57 · answer #8 · answered by lloysbanks 2 · 0 0

mens nipples are exactly the same as womens, and males have nipples because all most all mamels have them. and most people dont know it but men can lactate as well as women.

2006-08-09 00:23:57 · answer #9 · answered by its all about me 3 · 0 0

well they are useles(mens nipples men aren't entirely useless;))
The real reason is because when they are being formed its not clear if the baby is male or female plain and simple!!

2006-08-09 00:22:24 · answer #10 · answered by rosa_govan 3 · 0 0

You've obviously never sampled manmilk, have you big boobs? It's a secret we keep from womankind that secretly we all go and get ourselves milked twice a month. That's where full cream comes from, the other stuff is from cows.

2006-08-09 02:17:47 · answer #11 · answered by Grinner5000 4 · 0 0

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