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CARD 1
Graphics on Cards: On a yellow background, two eggs in lacy black underwear, red lipstick (pouting), black heels, and tights pose back to back with one leg raised. The image is framed with a floral border.
Text on Cards: SEX ED ANDAY!
SEX ED ANDAY! Human egg ko science mein ovum kehte hain
CARD 2
Graphics on Cards: On a pink background an embryo is seen with its umbilical cord attached, and tiny golden eggs around it.
Text on Cards: Embryos start producing eggs in the womb!
Typically a baby might have around 7 million (7000000) immature eggs while in the womb, which decreases to 7,00,000 by the time of puberty.
CARD 3
Graphics on Cards: On a turquoise background a fried egg with its yolk intact is pictured on the right side, on its left side, a human skin cell, a sperm cell , and a red blood cell are pictured.
Text on Cards: Human egg cells are pretty large.4 times larger than a skin cell16 times larger than a sperm cell26 times larger than a red blood cell. Bole toh, it’s the size of a grain of sand and. You can see it with the naked eye (No, you don’t have to get naked to see it)
CARD 4
Graphics on Cards: On a green background, an egg is pictured wearing a suit and tie with no face painted on it, indicating it is yet to be specialised into someone or something.
Text on Cards: Human eggs are full of instructions.
Human eggs contain RNA. RNA is like a supervisor in a factory. It carries a copy of the genetic code from DNA to the rest of the cell.It also helps the egg’s nucleus fuse with a sperm’s during fertilization. It guides the fertilized egg through its initial cell divisions, And, it tells the cells inside a developing embryo—which are all the same type at first—how to specialize, and what kind of cell they need to become.
CARD 5
Graphics on Cards: On a yellow background, an egg sporting a red lipstick and pouting towards a sperm cell who has shades and a top hat on is pictured. The egg is shown winking at the sperm cell.
Text on Cards: Once an oocyte (a developing egg) matures, it survives for 12-24 hours.
Sperms last for 1-5 days. It can take 30 minutes for the sperm to travel to the egg. (Cue theme from Mission Impossible, tan tan tan taran tan)
CARD 6
Graphics on Cards: On a turquoise background, a fried egg with a caricatured yolk, pictured winking, says “let’s stay fraands!” in a speech bubble above , while sperm swim around it trying to enter.
Text on Cards: Eggs are picky.We often picture the egg as a passive participant, waiting patiently for the first sperm to arrive. But current understanding suggests that the egg actually chooses which sperm to allow in and which to exclude. Eggs seem to favor sperm with undamaged DNA.(egg to rejected sperm: let’s stay fraands!)
CARD 7
Graphics on Cards: On a pink background, a cream colored egg is pictured, wrapped in a blue color shawl, with snowflakes falling all around it. It has an expression of warmth and calmness displayed on its caricatured face.
Text on Cards: Human eggs can be frozen forever! Different countries have time limits, but thanks to latest tech, human eggs can be frozen forever without them going bad.