You would probably have a better chance wining lotto
No, a vaginal suppository doesn't slow the flow of menstruation. Menstruation is the shedding of the uterus lining, nothing you put into your vaginal canal can effect this shedding process. There are medications that can effect your flow.
Vaginal fluid attracts sharks.
Vaginal discharge starts as you enter puberty, there is no way of telling when your period will start by when you started to get discharge. The most that can be said is that menstruation normally starts within four years of starting puberty.
A virgin means that you never have had sex. If you are NOT a virgin, then that means that you have had sex. "Sex" includes what goes "in" or "in" (oral or vaginal), but the word virgin applies specifically to a person who has not had intercourse. But, oral sex and vaginal sex carry the same risks of STDs.
You get a clitoris orgasm by rubbing your clit. And a vaginal orgasm by rubbing your G-spot.
No it has to be inside of her or directly at the vaginal opening vaginal.
That is your mucus plug !
The vagina is like before pregnancy but the cervix, the opening to the uterus, is closed by a mucus plug.
The vaginal opening is situated to the back of the vaginal folds, between the anus and the urethra. The urethra is the opening for urine to exit the body, it is the small opening in the center of the labial folds.
The vaginal orifice is the opening of the vagina
The vaginal orifice is the opening of the vagina
Only if he somehow get his semen inside your vagina or right at the opening of the vaginal canal either by using his penis or something else like fingers. And you sound like you would be too young to make out with someone if you don't know the basics of where and how babies come from.
If you are infertile you can not get pregnant and I'm not sure what you mean by vaginal infertility. When you have your period you can get pregnant too although it is rare.
The vulva (the outside) has 2 holes; the urethra and the vaginal canal. The vaginal canal (the inside) has one opening in the end and that is the cervix, the opening to the uterus.
The opening through which menstrual flow flows is the vaginal opening. Menstrual flow leaves the uterus via the cervix and then passes through the vaginal canal.
The midwife or doctor will check for dilation. They will put two fingers into the vagina and feel for the opening of the cervix. They will then determine how many fingers will fit inside the opening of the cervix. One finger equals one cm. Once you are 10cm, you are dilated enough to birth the baby.
The vaginal opening