There will always be a chance if you make contact with the genitals because the male could leak pre-sperm onto the vagina which could enter and travel up. It is highly unlikely but you shouldn't rule it out completely.
No, you can't get chlamydia from paper towels. You get it through sexual intercourse or other genital to genital contact.
Gender is simply whether the person is male or female. Sex is the physical contact of another person's genitals and is usually interpreted to mean a very sexual act such as masturbation, oral-genital contact, or intercourse (genital to genital contact).
NO. The sperm cells have to get in the female genital tract for the egg to get fertilized.
Minimal genital-genital contact can transmit chlamydia. Use a condom before oral, anal, or vaginal sex or genital-genital contact.
It's possible to get chlamydia through genital-genital contact without intercourse. The problem with your question is the word "virgin." That word doesn't describe risk factors for STDs. That is, "virgin" doesn't say anything about whether you've exchanged potentially infectious fluids or had skin to skin contact with another person.It's possible to get STDs including chlamydia, HPV, HSV, gonorrhea, syphilis, and trichomonas by having genital-genital contact. Whatever your partners history, both partners should get tested prior to exchanging fluids.You can't get chlamydia if your partner and you were virgins.
It depends what type of sex and how you do it. There is oral sex, which is mouth-to-genital contact; anal sex, which is when the man enters the woman through her anus; and sexual intercourse, which is when he enters her vagina.
Any sexual activity involving genital-genital contact can transmit the herpes virus.
If you have genital-genital contact, it's possible to pass chlamydia. Chlamydia is spread by oral, anal, and vaginal sex; genital-genital contact; sharing sex toys; and birth to an infected woman.
it causes pain during sexual intercourse
You can't get chlamydia from a genital scar. Chlamydia is spread by sexual contact with someone who's infected. You can get it from oral, anal, or vaginal sex; genital-genital contact; sharing sex toys; or birth to an infected woman.
Mouth to mouth kissing will not spread genital HPV, unless of course the mouth has already been in contact with an infected genital area! Any direct skin contact with the genital area can spread the virus.
No, you can't get chlamydia from sharing a phone. It's spread only by sexual contact with someone who's infected. You get chlamydia from having oral, anal, or vaginal sex; genital-genital contact; sharing sex toys; or birth to a mother with chlamydia.