Reproductive system

Cards (22)

  • Is called (“large lips”) enclose and protect the other external reproductive organs. During puberty, hair growth occurs on the skin of the organ, which also contain sweat and oil-secreting glands.
    Labia Majora
  • Is called (“small lips”) and can have a variety of sizes and shapes. They lie just inside your labia majora, and surround the opening to your vagina (the canal that joins the lower part of your uterus to the outside of your body) and urethra (the tube that carries pee from your bladder to the outside of your body). This skin is very delicate and can become easily irritated and swollen?
    Labia minora
  • This is where your two labia minora meet, a small, sensitive protrusion that’s comparable to a penis in men or people assigned male at birth (AMAB). It is covered by a fold of skin called the prepuce and is very sensitive to stimulation.
    Clitoris
  • Allows menstrual blood and babies to exit your body. Tampons, fingers, sex toys or penises can go inside your vagina through this organ.
    Vaginal opening
  • Is a piece of tissue covering or surrounding part of your vaginal opening. It’s formed during development and present during birth.
    Hymen
  •  It is the hole you pee from.
    Urethral opening
  • It is a muscular canal that joins the cervix (the lower part of the uterus) to the outside of the body. It can widen to accommodate a baby during delivery and then shrink back to hold something narrow like a tampon. It’s lined with mucous membranes that help keep it moist.
    Vagina
  • It is a hollow, pear-shaped organ that holds a fetus during pregnancy. And is divided into two parts: the cervix and the corpus. Your corpus is the larger part that expands during pregnancy.
    Uterus
  • These are small, oval-shaped glands that are located on either side of your uterus. It produce eggs and hormones.
    Ovaries
  • These are narrow tubes that are attached to the upper part of your uterus and serve as pathways for your egg (ovum) to travel from your ovaries to your uterus. Fertilization of an egg by sperm normally occurs in this organ. The fertilized egg then moves to the uterus, where it implants into your uterine lining.
    Fallopian tubes
  • It is the loose, pouch-like sac of skin that hangs behind the penis. It holds the testicles (testes) as well as nerves and blood vessels.
    Scrotum
  •  It is the base of your penis. It attaches to the wall of your abdomen.

    Root
  • It is the male organ for sexual intercourse?
    Penis
  • These are oval-shaped organs that lie in your scrotum. They’re about the size of two large olives.
    Testicles
  • It is a long, coiled tube that rests on the back of each testicle. It carries and stores the sperm cells that your testicles create.
    Epididymis
  • It is a long, muscular tube that travels from the epididymis into the pelvic cavity, just behind the urinary bladder. This organ also transports mature sperm to the urethra in preparation for ejaculation?
    Vas deferens
  • This organ moves through your prostate, where they collect fluid to add to semen. They empty into your urethra.
    Ejaculatory ducts
  • It is the tube that carries pee from your bladder outside of your body. If you have a penis, it also ejaculates semen when you reach orgasm.
    Urethra
  • are sac-like pouches that attach to the vas deferens near the base of the bladder
    seminal vesicles
  • It is a walnut-sized gland that rests below your bladder, in front of your rectum. The prostate adds additional fluid to ejaculate, which helps nourish sperm. The urethra runs through the center of this organ.
    Prostate gland
  • It is a walnut-sized gland that rests below your bladder, in front of your rectum. The prostate adds additional fluid to ejaculate, which helps nourish sperm. The urethra runs through the center of this organ.
    Prostate gland
  • These glands are pea-sized structures on the sides of your urethra, just below your prostate. They create a clear, slippery fluid that empties directly into the urethra. This fluid lubricates the urethra and neutralizes any acids that may remain from your pee.
    Bulbourethral glands