5 to 5.2 inches
The cervix is located inside a woman's vagina. The vaginal opening is an opening to the vaginal canal that leads to the cervix. The cervix is a tiny hole the shape of a doughnut that leads to a woman's uterus.
The vaginal walls are the borders of the opening that leads from the outside of the body to the cervix. They are muscular and flexible.
The vulva (the outside) has 2 holes; the urethra and the vaginal canal. The vaginal canal (the inside) has one opening in the end and that is the cervix, the opening to the uterus.
The cervix is a cylindrical neck of tissue that connects the vagina and uterus, playing a role in menstruation and childbirth. The hymen is a thin membrane that partially covers the opening of the vagina, commonly present in females at birth but can be stretched or torn due to activities like sex or physical activities.
The opening through which menstrual flow flows is the vaginal opening. Menstrual flow leaves the uterus via the cervix and then passes through the vaginal canal.
Your menstrual flow comes out via your vaginal opening. The vaginal opening is at the bottom/back of your vulva, between your urethra (where you urinate from) and your anus (where you deficate from) - the vaginal opening is the same hole that vaginal discharge comes out of. Try looking at diaphragms online, such as from sex education sites like Scarleteen, to get an idea of where to look.
The vagina is like before pregnancy but the cervix, the opening to the uterus, is closed by a mucus plug.
the internal OS
the vaginal opening that leads to the cervix. At your age though...I dont know
It is the cervix.
No, a tampon cannot get stuck in the uterus. Tampons sit within the vaginal canal, at the top of the vaginal canal is the cervix which is the opening to the uterus - the opening within the cervix is too small for a tampon to pass through, also the tampon sits slightly lower down than the cervix.
The opening of the female reproductive system is called the cervix.