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A SET of identical twins who married identical brothers have revealed how they paired up, with trolls wondering if the two swap with one another. Brittany and Briana Deane met and madly fell in love with twin brothers Josh and Jeremy Salyers at a festival in 2017, before tying the knot just a year later. Following a whirlwind romance , the two couples had a joint wedding on August 5, 2018, and now live in the same home in Virginia , USA .

Brittany and Briana, who are in their thirties, also fell pregnant around the same time, with Jeremy and Briana welcoming their son Jax in January of 2021 . Just a few months later, in April, the family was joined by Josh and Brittany's son Jett. The two little toddlers are essentially quaternary twins , which means they're cousins and genetic siblings too.



read more on dating The unusual family often offer a glimpse of their lives on Instagram , where they boast more than a staggering 322k fans. In a more recent post, the twins revealed how they decided on who's going to date whom - and it's all to do with the time of birth. "We paired off by birth order – not on purpose.

.. it was a natural gravitation! "Briana and Jeremy are each the older twin.

They fell in love and got married. Brittany and Josh are each the younger twin. Most read in Fabulous ''They fell in love and got married also.

" Since being shared, the post garnered thousands of likes and comments, with one writing: "Perfect for each other." Another added: "Am I the only one thinking they swap sometimes." Chatting to USA Today previously, Brittany said: '' I think for a lot of people in the dating world, specially singletons, they are looking for their other half.

"We each already had another half – a literal other half and we each previously had experiences where we dated people who were annoyed that it was not them who was considered the other half. According to the NHS, everyone has the same chance of having identical twins: about 1 in 250. Identical twins do not run in families.

But there are some factors that make having non-identical twins more likely: non-identical twins are more common in some ethnic groups, with the highest rate among Nigerians and the lowest among Japanese, the experts stated . If you’re pregnant and over 35 you’re more likely to have non-identical twins because you’re more likely to release more than one egg during the ovulation period. Non-identical twins run on the mother's side of the family, probably because of an inherited tendency to release more than one egg.

''But the four of us all understand the twin thing." The two sisters had dated nontwins, or "singletons" as they call them, but had always dreamed of marrying another set of identical twins. After welcoming their set of kids, the family of six now all live under the same roof.

READ MORE SUN STORIES "We 'parent trapped' ourselves, and everything is nonstop! We are very happy with our two baby boys,'' Briana chuckled. ''If we do expand our families, we would hope to be lucky enough to experience overlapping pregnancies together again.''.

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