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menstruate
[ men-stroo-eyt, -streyt ]
menstruate
/ ˈmɛnstrʊˌeɪt /
verb
- intr to undergo menstruation
Other Words From
- un·menstru·ating adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of menstruate1
Word History and Origins
Origin of menstruate1
Example Sentences
For those who do not typically menstruate, breakthrough bleeding was reported by 71% of people on long-acting reversible contraceptives, 39% of individuals on gender-affirming hormones, and 66% of postmenopausal people.
Then there’s John Fawcett’s brilliant 2000 Ginger Snaps, in which a goth teenager is attacked—and transformed—by a wild beast on the same day she starts menstruating.
It monitors fluctuations in body heat to predict when users will start menstruating, up to 30 days in advance.
This is familiar for many menstruating people who already bear the burden of preventing pregnancy, especially when facing partners who won’t wear condoms.
Of course, not all women have uteruses, and not all people who have uteruses, or who menstruate, are women.
For instance, some women use it not only to curb premenstrual symptoms, but also to control when they menstruate.
The always-edifying Ann Coulter tweeted that Marines were “protecting his right to menstruate.”
Today the most basic choice is whether or not to menstruate at all.
The drugs allow women to menstruate just four or fewer times a year.
I ceased to menstruate for about a year, which my doctor has said could have a lasting impact on my fertility.
A girl who began to menstruate when at the age of nine years, became pregnant very shortly afterwards (d'Outreport).
In my own opinion there is no doubt but that some females really do menstruate while pregnant.
She was reared in the utmost poverty, was chlorotic, and did not menstruate till she was eighteen years old.
But then why don't all women menstruate at the same time with the same moon, I mean?
It is extremely rare for a woman to conceive who does not menstruate regularly.
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