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Female internal reproductive anatomy
The vagina (from the Latin for "sheath" or "scabbard" ) is the tubular tract
leading from the uterus to the exterior of the body in female mammals, or to the cloaca in female birds and some reptiles. Insects
and other invertebrates also have a vagina, which is the terminal part of
the oviduct.
For the purposes of anatomy, a vagina can also be any structure that serves as a
sheath (or theca), as in, the vagina of the
portal vein. Another example is the fibrous sheath around tendons, called a vagina fibrosa when solid or a vagina mucosa when it contains a fluid-filled cavity around the tendon.
Mammalian vagina
The hymen—a membrane situated
behind the urethral opening—partially occludes the vagina in many organisms,
including some human females, from birth until it is ruptured by first coitus, or by any number of other activites including medical examinations, injury, certain
types of exercise, introduction of a foreign object, etc.
The vagina can perform the following tasks:
- Provide pleasure, especially sexual pleasure, to a woman.
- Provide a path for menstrual fluids to leave the body.
- Admit the penis of the male for coitus and
ultimately the introduction of male gametes (sperm) for the fertilization of ova.
- Provide a route to deliver a fully gestated fetus from the uterus to its independent life outside the body of the mother in the
process of live birth. During birth, the vagina is often referred to as the
birth canal.
Humans
Female external sexual anatomy
External vaginal anatomy
A woman's external genitals are often referred to as "vagina", but strictly speaking, this is the vulva or pudenda (Latin shame), as distinguished from the
interior vaginal tract. The physical construction of the exterior vagina consists of the mons pubis (also known as mons veneris), clitoral
hood, clitoris, labia
majora, labia minora, and the perineum
See also: Vulvovaginal disorders, Vulvovaginal health, Skene's glands, G-spot, pudenda, sexual slang, vaginal lubrication
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