Yes. The vagina (vaginal orifice), anus, and urethra (for peeing). See the Related Link below for a 3D diagram of the vagina (from an underside view, looking up). The second Related Link will show you a real-life picture of a woman's vagina (from an underside view, looking up). If you are under 13, please ask your parents for permission to view this photo. Note to other Supervisors: this is not porn. It is a medical photo from a nurse practioner's website.
The three biggest reasons why females fight over a man are generally relate to the man's income, his penis size, and virility.
A yorkie is usually in heat for three weeks.
NO! Females are the only ones who have teat's.
y do u need to no sucha a bad question
one hundred six eggs every tweny five seconds
One opening for the urethra and two for the ureters.
There are openings once every three to five years.
According to Gray's Anatomy, the obturator foramen is contained by sometimes called pelvic region of the trunk) is the lower part of the trunk, between the abdomen and the lower limbs (legs).The pelvis includes several structures:The bony pelvis, or pelvic skeleton, the part of the skeleton connecting the sacrum region of the spine to the femurs.Subdivided into the pelvic girdle (the two hip bones, which are part of the appendicular skeleton) and the pelvic region of the spine (sacrum, and coccyx, which are part of the axial skeleton)The pelvic cavity, typically defined as a small part of the space enclosed by the pelvic skeleton, delimited by the pelvic brim above and the pelvic floor below; alternatively, the pelvic cavity is sometimes also defined as the whole space enclosed by the pelvic skeleton, subdivided into:The greater or false pelvis, above the pelvic brimThe lesser or true pelvis, below the pelvic brimThe pelvic floor or pelvic diaphragm, below the pelvic cavityThe perineum, below the pelvic diaphragmIn the human, the pelvic skeleton is formed in the area of the back (posterior dorsal), by the sacrum and the coccyx (the caudal portion of the axial skeleton), and laterally and anteriorly (forward and to the side), by a pair of hip bones, the lower extremity, (parts of the appendicular skeleton).In an adult human being, the pelvic skeleton is thus composed of three large bones, and the coccyx (3-5 bones);However, before puberty, each hip bone consists of three discrete (separate) bones - the ilium, ischium, pubis - that have yet to fuse at adulthood; thus, in puberty, the human pelvic skeleton can comprise more than 10 bones, depending upon the composition of the person's coccyx.
Three! Get off here and stop thinking about birds butts
1. Fur 2. Mammary Glands (in females) 3. Three middle ear bones 4. A neocortex region of the brain
A pelvic keystone is the arch of the pelvis where the bone is thinner at the bottom and wedges itself strongly against the pillars. The pelvis is made up of three bones and three functional arches.
There are only three holes in a woman's pelvic region, the anu, the vagina and the urethra. A woman bleeds from her vagina (the second/middle hole) during menstruation.
One opening for the urethra and two for the ureters.
Yes, assuming it's in the right region, between the legs. This represents the beginning of the pelvic bones which appears like 3 lines, or sometimes like 3 dots, in girls.
Yes Yes, the otter has hair, sweat glands, three middle ear bones, females have mammary glands and the otter has a neocortex region in the brain. These are all features of a mammal.
The sacrum has a base, an apex, and three surfaces: a pelvic, dorsal and a lateral surface.
The broad ligament extends from the left pelvic wall to the right pelvic wall and basically sandwiches the uterus in place. The broad ligament has three main regions: mesometrium, mesovarium, and mesosalpinx.