urethra
Urine leaves the kidneys through the ureters which are tubes that carry the urine to the bladder. The bladder stores the urine until it is expelled from the body through the urethra.
Urine leaves the bladder through theUrethra,then exits the body.
Urine leaves the body through the urethra. The urethra connects the bladder to the outside of the body.
Each kidney sends urine to the bladder through a tube called a ureter. This is not to be confused with the urethra, the tube through which urine leaves the bladder and is expelled.
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.
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 urinary bladder receives urine from the kidneys via muscular tubes called the ureters. Urine is then stored until a sufficient quantity has collected to stretch the bladder and create the urge to urinate, excreting the urine through the urethra.
The bladder stores urine before it is urinated out of the body.
Bladder
Urine goes from the kidneys to the ureters, and then into the bladder of a pig. Next, the urine goes from the bladder to the urethra. Finally, the urine is expelled from the body.
Kidney to ureter, to bladder, through urethra, out!
Urine is stored in the bladder, a hollow organ located in the lower abdomen. The bladder expands as it fills with urine from the kidneys and contracts when it is emptied through the urethra during urination.