Yes, it is possible for a tampon to tear or irritate the cervical lining. This is more common when using length-ways expanding tampons such as Playtex, rayon tampons such as Playtex, Tampax, or Kotex, also more common in women who have short vaginal canals.
On the tampon you will primarily see menstrual blood and discharge - although you may not be able to see the discharge as it's mixed with the blood. You can also see clots, cervical mucus mixed with blood, and larger pieces of the uterine lining. You should not see pus as community answer claims.
cervical effacement
Depending on the size of the tear, it can heal on its own or may need suturing.
Not breakable as such. But you can "tear" a muscle. And ruin the lining of the muscle.
No, the cervical mucus is of such small size that it cannot make your abdomen look big.
If you have your period, the shedding of the lining is more or less continuous. If you take out a tampon, bleeding will continue, but you might not notice it on a pad until it makes its way down the vagina.
The clear thin thing hanging from your tampon may be cervical mucus.The opening to your cervix is blocked with a thick mucus - this mucus softens and flows into the vagina when you're fertile in order to help the sperm swim up to reach the egg when you ovulate. During menstruation you may be fertile, or sometimes mucus can be carried along with menstrual flow.
Stratified squamus keratinized
The possessive form of the noun glove is glove's.example: There is a tear in the glove's lining.
Colonoscopy fissure. I would assume a tear or separation in the lining of the colon. Not caused by the exam.
The word sought may be ulcer (a hole or tear, especially in the stomach or lining of the mouth).
aka cervical spondylosis, micromyalgia or better known as "wear&tear of the cervical spine disks" People who have been hit in the head and survive or happens with old age. Based on how old you are, you can probably determine were you stand.