Yes. Male breasts have milk ducts.
Because your milk ducts get bigger.
Some women say they can, there is a possibility that some do in fact know their breasts so well that they can feel a difference.
Primarily milk-producing glands. Actually , the majority is adipose [fatty ] tissue, along with milk glands , milk ducts, veins and blood vessels.
Keeping the breasts from becoming engorged may help prevent mastitis by preventing plugging of milk ducts.
Yes because they are in your breasts. During a mastectomy the beasts and the surrounding tissue is removed.
Women have breasts because, in the womb, genes tell the embryo that it's going to be female. Female animals have breasts to store milk for their young.
When girls hit puberty, estrogen is released into the body and the breasts begin to grow. This tends to coincide with the beginning of menstruation. As the breasts grow, the milk ducts in them increase in size, causing the breasts to expand at the nipple. Then the breast tissue itself expands. During pregnancy, the hormone progesterone readies the breasts to produce milk. The breasts grow larger due to additional fat and swollen milk glands.
Only if the woman is near giving birth or is breastfeeding their child. Otherwise, it is simply a network of ducts and fat.
Because women need to feed milk to their babies. It's the same with all mammals. Men do not produce milk.
The female breasts exist to give milk to their babies. Since many men prefer women with big breasts, instead of small ones, many women try to increase the size of their breasts (within reason) to appeal to men. Most men do not like breasts that are too big.
Women have breasts primarily for the purpose of breastfeeding infants. Breasts contain mammary glands that produce milk to nourish and provide essential nutrients to newborns.