SEXUAL ANATOMY OF WOMEN: VIRGINITY. G-SPOT AND FEMALE EJACULATION

Posted: March 20th, 2009 under Women's Health.
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Virginity and the hymen    

The hymen is very important to some people as a sign of virginity. They believe that a woman whose hymen is stretched open has let a boy or his penis in her vagina. But that isn’t always true, because some women are born without a hymen. Others stretch and break theirs open during normal physical activities. Some bleeding may result when a hymen is torn. Something as simple as playing sports, horseback riding a bicycle can break the hymen. A bride’s virginity is highly prized in cultures that demand that women’s only sex partners be their husbands. Bleeding during intercourse is believed to be a sign of virginity. In these cultures, bed sheets
are examined for signs of blood after a wedding night. If blood is found, the female is considered to have been a virgin. However, a woman may be a virgin and still not bleed during her first intercourse.

The G-spot and female ejaculation

The G-Spot is thought to contribute to female orgasm and female ejaculation. It was once believed that only urine passed through the female urethra. However, researchers have recently studied female ejaculation. In some women, a clear fluid spurts out of the urethra during intense sexual excitement and during orgasm. In some women, this fluid is urine and not a true ejaculation. In other women, the fluid is similar to the fluid produced by the prostate in men. It is estimated that about 10 percent of women experience this kind of ejaculation.

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