Urethra.
The opening in called a urethra, in both males and females.
urethral meatus
That would be urine.
The medical term for the opening through which urine leaves the body is the "urethra." It serves as a passage for urine to travel from the bladder to the outside of the body for elimination.
The urethra provides a passage way for urine as it leaves the body.
Urine leaves the body through the urethra, a tube which leads from the urinary bladder through the genital area to the outside of the body.
No, the birth canal (vagina) where a baby exits a woman's body is a separate opening from the one where urine leaves. The urethra, which carries urine, has a very small opening in front of the vaginal opening.
Yes that's why it is sometimes called the urethral opening
The urine exits the body through the urethra, which is a separate opening from the vagina in females.
Through an opening called the cloaca, like all birds. This one opening is used for urine, feces, and all sexual functions.
Any passage or opening leading to the interior of the body is known as a meatus. The external opening through which urine passes out of the body is called the urinary meatus.
Both men and women eliminate urine through a tube called the urethra. It is a duct that connects the bladder to the external opening of the body.