If by which hole, you mean either the vagina or the anus, it would definitely be the vagina.
Babys come from the vaginal hole aka the womb.
they die in a hole
the same exact way people come out
squirting doesn't come out of the pee hole.
Babies develop in the uterus of the mother. Depending on the species, the uterus comes in a variety of shapes--humans have a single uterine body with no uterine horns, but cows, for example, have a uterus that is divided into two horns, where the calf develops. During birth, the baby passes out of the uterus through the cervix and then is born from the vagina. In the related links section there's a link to a good diagram of the reproductive tract of a human.
The one up above the bum hole where your baby will come out
vagina - sort of peehole
no if the baby has come out of the back or head it will go back to normal soon and the hole will just close up
Yes, it's not fun. Use baby wipes. A LOT of baby wipes.But don't flush them.
Babys come from the vaginal hole aka the womb.
I'm rewriting Molly Moppy's first answer: Well your mom has a sperm in her that Attaches to an egg, then the egg grows into a baby. When you come out you come out of a hole that widens gradually.
Blue baby
The baby comes out of the frontal private area called the vagina, located below where the penis is on a male body. The hole stretches like spandex, to let something bigger come out. The hole is as small as a dime and grows to a foot to let the baby out.
Next to the dirt star
Come Baby Come was created in 1993.
because you see, the baby actually turns into a hairball which is not a baby anymore so there really isn't any problem. plus a walrus doesn't have arms so how can he chuck it at a tree and a walrus has to be in water and trees arn't in water and a tree doesn't have a mouth and where did the hole come from?
A hole in the heart is present in every baby while in the womb. The hole acts as a shunt to bypass the blood going to the lungs (which can not be used in the womb). In normal development this hole is shut by a flap (that eventually seals) when the baby takes its first breath.