vagina

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Web Search results for vagina - 39,700,000
The vagina (from Latin, literally "sheath" or "scabbard") is a fibromuscular tubular tract leading from the uterus to the exterior of the body in female ...en.wikipedia.org
my friend, who is a huge maynard fan, buys the new Puscifer album on release date and then gets the title tattooed in the most appropriate place.www.youtube.com
Views: 1930432. Californication - No Hair on Vagina ... Views: 253029. Xiaxue asks about plastic surgery for the vagina ...www.youtube.com
The guys from Playboy out to teach some vagina awareness. Quite a interesting clip. ... It seems that her vagina is, well, not shaped right for me. ...www.metacafe.com
Online manual for vaginal tightening and toning, smaller is simply better!.www.vaginaenhancement.com
Hand Vagina. You gotta grow up sometime... From CH Staff on Oct 4, 2007. Watch CHTV on your iPod! ... View Credits Hide Credits. Credits for "Hand Vagina" ...www.collegehumor.com
So, when I say vagina, you'll know I mean your internal anatomy -- the part you can feel when you slide a finger inside -- and when I say vulva, ...www.scarleteen.com
The vagina is the female internal sex organ that begins on the outside at the vaginal opening and extends about three to five inches inside, ending at the ...health.discovery.com
Wikipedia
Vagina
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For other uses, see Vagina (disambiguation).
Vagina
Human female internal reproductive anatomy - profile view.
Latin
"sheath" or "scabbard"
Gray's
subject #269 1264
Artery
Iliolumbar artery, vaginal artery, middle rectal artery
Lymph
upper part to internal iliac lymph nodes, lower part to superficial inguinal lymph nodes
Precursor
urogenital sinus and paramesonephric ducts
MeSH
Vagina
Dorlands/Elsevier
v_01/12842531
The vagina (from Latin, literally "sheath" or "scabbard") is a fibromuscular tubular tract leading from the uterus to the exterior of the body in female placental mammals and marsupials, or to the cloaca in female birds, monotremes, and some reptiles. Female insects and other invertebrates also have a vagina, which is the terminal part of the oviduct. The Latinate plural (rarely used in English) is vaginae.
In common speech, the term "vagina" is often used to refer to the vulva or female genitals generally; strictly speaking, the vagina is a specific internal structure and the vulva is the exterior genitalia only.

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