The average person loses his or her virginity at age 17.
Virgins make up 12.3 percent of females and 14.3 percent of males aged 20 to 24.
The average male loses his virginity at age 16.9; females average slightly older, at 17.4.
Very nice and interesting tidbit of information, I'm so glad you posted this.
>>2
In the US, approximately 0.3% of females die a virgin, while it's about 1.2% for males that die a virgin.
>>3
I am so honored to be a future part of the 1%, I have been working very hard to achieve this goal and it is now close to paying off.
It wasn't easy, either. I had to spend thousands of dollars on plastic surgery in an attempt to make myself as gruesome as possible; I had to ingest a daily intake of 5000 calories so as to make myself so obese I wouldn't even be able to move out of my bed/desk setup; and I rubbed my skin every morning with a homemade mixture of diarrhea (my own), horse grease, and cum (not my own because I've long since lost sight of my own penis) so as to make my skin smell as rancid as possible.
But now, after all these years, I can finally say I am close to dying a virgin (I'm only 28 but my doctor says I only have two more years to live).
>>4
I am a 23 year old virgin. It's actually very easy to be a virgin. You just have to spend your free time at home and not go out.
It's even easier to stay a virgin for the rest of your life. The longer you wait, the more likely it becomes that you will die a virgin. So you have to idle till about 30 years of age and your lifelong virginity is assured.
Yay I'm an outlier.
Why are there less females that are virgins compared to males?
i lost my virginity age 14
>>10
Think about it for just a second. If it takes longer than that for you to figure it out, you might have some pretty serious brain damage.
>>10
It's because all girls are liars. They just say they're not virgins to sound cool.
>>13
If they were questioned by one of their friends they might lie, but there's no one who they can impress by ticking the 'not a virgin' box on a paper questionnaire.
>>14
Wait a minute. Who is handing out these questionnaires? And who is tabulating the results? And to what purpose?
>>10
The difference is of 2%, depending on the sample size, that could amount for virtually nothing worth noting, or simply nothing worth noting with no virtualities involved.