Through the uterus: Sperm (after sex and assuming the male has ejaculated inside the female), the lining of the uterus wall (also known as menstrual blood), discharged eggs that go unfertilized, and babies if born.
Through the fallopian tubes: Sperm (sperm actually meets the female egg inside the fallopian tube a little under halfway out to the uterus), and the egg. To my knowledge, that's all.
The oocyte is carried toward the uterus by a combination of peristalsis and the rhythmic beating of cilia.
It's called a fallopian tube. It attached from the ovary to the uterus, it's where the eggs travel through.
The fallopian tube.
Zygote
Near the ovary you have fimbriated end of the Fallopian tube. It take in the ovum inside. Then you have cilia in the Fallopian tube to push the ovum towards the uterus.
fallopian tube
The long tube between the ovary and the uterus is the fallopian tube. There are usually two fallopian tubes in the female body, one for each ovary.
=A tube which allows you to urinate.==The fallopian tube is the tube which connects the ovaries to the uterus. It is along this tube that ova travel. They can sometimes be fertilized in this tube and here to the wall and start to develop. This is known as an ectopic pregnancy.=
the fallopian tubes connect the ovaries to the uterus
The Fallopian tubes.
Every month, the Ovaries release a egg which waits to be fertilized by sperm in the oviduct-known as the fallopian tubes. A unfertilized egg just leaves the ovary, out through the Oviduct descending into the Uterus and out through the vagina.
The fertilized ovum moves through the fallopian tube to the uterus. Once at the uterus the blastocyst floats around until it finds a spot on the uterine lining to implant.
The fallopian tube is the typical site of human fertilization. It carries the egg from the ovary to the uterus.