Outside.
you apply it to the inside of the condom and the outside for maximum intensity, but do not use it as a spermicide.
the sperm inside the condom cannot impregnate you. However if there is a hole or split in the condom the sperm that escapes can. Although condoms are coated in spermicide it will not kill all of the sperm.
Some of the spermicide will remain in the female but not enough to protect against pregnancy once the condom is removed. Spermicidal condoms are being criticized for reducing protection against STDs--the spermicide makes cell membranes less resistant to infections.
A condom is an sperm barrier used with a spermicide.
That's most likely spermicide. Spermicide kills any sperm cells if they escape from the condom. Basically, the "white stuff" is extra protection.
No, the majority of the sperm would have already moved past the cervix, out of reach of the spermicide.
Yes, if it leaked inside the vagina you could get pregnant. Using condoms with spermicide will cut some of this risk.
This has happened to me too and I was worried the first time. It's probably just lubricant and/or spermicide. Or... it may be from your gf's pussy, perhaps because of an infection. If it smells bad then I'd recommend you get it checked.
possibly, the outside of the condom is fine and clean but if the inside of it lets some semen into your vagina then you might get pregnant, your probably fine though this is highly unlikely
Barrier contraceptive is a condom, and chemical contraceptive is spermicide.
Because a lubricant (makes things slippery) so a condom may be lubricated but not kill sperm (spermicide) BUT all spermicidal condoms are also lubricated.
Wearing a condom in addition to using a backup method. A great combination (but not always best for 'the mood') is a condom with a spermicide. They come in many different forms. There are gels, liquids, films. Always use the pill or a spermicide in conjunction with condoms.