R
RAPE:
One kind of sexual abuse. It is forced sexual intercourse. The
person could be a husband, friend, date or stranger. Any person who
makes someone have sex with them when they don't want to do it,
makes RAPE happen. This is against the law. The person who is RAPED
might feel guilty, like they did something wrong, or ashamed. This
is not true. It is important for the person to find someone they
trust to talk to about it.
REPRODUCTION:
This is the whole process involved in making a baby. REPRODUCTION
begins with VAGINAL INTERCOURSE, and includes the entire PREGNANCY,
as well as rearing the child after birth.
REPRODUCTIVE
ORGANS: The parts of a human body that do things to help make
babies. Each part has a different job to do. In the female these
parts would be the fallopian tubes, ovaries, uterus, cervix and the
vagina. In the male the parts would be the penis, scrotum and
testicles.
RHYTHM
METHOD: A way that some people use to keep from getting
PREGNANT. People try to do this by not having sex on the days that a
woman would usually get PREGNANT. This is usually a few days before,
during and after ovulation. Because it's hard to figure out when
this happens in each woman, it usually doesn't work very well. It
also doesn't stop germs that cause STDs from getting into people's
bodies when they do have sex.
RIMMING:
Someone putting their mouth, lips or tongue in or around the ANUS
(butt hole) of another person. It is one kind of ORAL SEX. People
can get STDs from doing this. It doesn't matter if someone is doing
it or having it done to them. A person can place MOISTURE BARRIER
around the ANUS to prevent the spread of an STD during RIMMING.
RISK:
Taking a chance. Having any kind of sex without a latex condom are
RISKS for getting STDs, Sharing drug needles can put you at RISK for
getting HIV and other blood borne infections including HEPATITIS B.
RUBBER:
A slang term for CONDOM.
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S
SAFER SEX:
There are ways to have sexual contact that allow little to no chance
of getting a sexually transmitted disease. These include properly
using latex condoms and other moisture barriers, mutual or
self-masturbation, and abstinence from sexual contact.
SALIVA:
Another word for spit. It is the fluid in a person's mouth. Most
STDs can not be SPREAD by a person's SALIVA.
SANITARY
NAPKIN: A pad of cotton with a strip of tape on one side that a
woman can stick onto her underwear during her period. This soaks up
the flow of blood that comes out of her vagina.
SCROTUM:
The soft sac of wrinkled skin that cover, hold, and protect a man's
TESTICLES.
SEMEN:
The clear, whitish liquid that squirts out of a man's penis when he
ejaculates. It is sticky. SPERM are in the SEMEN. There are about
one million inside one drop of SEMEN. SEMEN gives the sperm
something to swim in, otherwise they couldn't move around. Slang
terms: Jism, cum, juice, jit.
SEX:
This means many things. Sex can be another word for gender. Or sex
can be any activity that causes someone to have a good feeling
inside his or her body or genitals. It could be kissing, hugging,
body rubbing, touching or sexual intercourse.
SEX ORGANS:
Another word for GENITALS.
SEX WORKER:
Another word for PROSTITUTE.
SEX TOYS:
Things that people might buy in a store and use during sex with
themselves or with another person. They could be DILDOS, handcuffs
or costumes.
SEXUAL
ABUSE: When someone mistreats another person in a sexual way. It
is wrong for someone to SEXUALLY ABUSE another person. SEXUAL ABUSE
happens whenever someone touches or does something to the private
parts/genitals of another person's body that person does not want
her/him to do. SEXUAL ABUSE also happens when someone makes another
person touch or do something to her/his private parts/genitals that
they do not want to do. This "someone" could be someone
the person knows, someone the person loves, or a stranger. SEXUAL
ABUSE does not mean just forced sexual intercourse or activity, it
can also include unwanted touching, fondling, watching, and talking
in a sexual way. It can also include people forcing others to look
at their genitals. Rape is one kind of SEXUAL ABUSE.
SEXUAL
CONTACT: Another way to explain being with someone in a close,
physical way.
SEXUAL
DESIRE: A strong interest or attraction for another person.
SEXUAL DESIRE is how the body feels that person. It is not the same
as love. People can have SEXUAL DESIRE with or without love. Many
people are happiest when they have love and SEXUAL DESIRE.
SEXUAL
FLUIDS: The wetness that comes out of a man or a woman's
genitals. For men it is semen and pre-seminal fluid and for women it
is vaginal and cervical secretions. These SEXUAL FLUIDS have HIV in
them if the person is infected.
SEXUAL
INTERCOURSE: Any type of activity that involves the sharing of
body FLUIDS, or the penetration of an oriface (the mouth, vagina, or
anus) between two or more people. SEXUAL INTERCOURSE can describe
when a man puts his penis inside a person's anus or inside a woman's
vagina. SEXUAL INTERCOURSE also includes ORAL SEX (when someone
licks or sucks another person's GENITALS). People can get STDs,
including HIV, if they do this without a safe BARRIER that prevents
the fluids from getting from one person to another.
SEXUAL
ORIENTATION: Whether people are homosexual, heterosexual or
bisexual. A person can not choose their SEXUAL ORIENTATION. Their
body chooses it for them before they start to have sex or even
before they start going through PUBERTY. SEXUAL ORIENTATION might
even be figured out before birth, just like gender.
SEXUAL
PLEASURE: A good feeling that people get when they have sex with
someone else or are physically close to another person.
SEXUALITY:
Everything in our daily lives that makes us attractive and sexual
humans. It is made up of GENDER, sexual desire and feelings, and
sexual contact.
SODOMY:
Could refer to: 1) anal sex; 2) oral-anal contact; 3) oral-genital;
4) sexual acts with animals; 5) or a vague term for
"unnatural" sexual acts. Also called buggery.
SORE: A
spot on the body made by an ulcer, being rubbed or a cut that hasn't
healed. A SORE is an opening on the body that germs, including HIV,
could get into.
SPECIMEN:
A sample.
SPERM:
Little tiny living things that are made in a man's testicles. If you
were to look at them under a microscope you would think they look
like tadpoles because they have tails to help them swim. People
can't see them. When a man ejaculates, semen squirts out of his
penis. There are SPERM swimming around in the semen and pre-seminal
fluid. If this happens in or near a female's vagina, the SPERM can
swim around and try to find an egg. If a SPERM does and then gets
inside of the woman's egg she becomes pregnant. SPERM can live in
the vagina up to five days. If a male doesn't ejaculate then the
SPERM is soaked up by his own body.
SPERMICIDE:
A chemical that kills sperm. People can buy it without a doctor's
prescription as a foam, cream or jelly. SPERMICIDE can be placed on
the outside of a condom or inside a woman's vagina. This helps to
stop pregnancy. It cannot be used by itself to stop HIV from getting
into someone else's body. SPERMICIDE can be used with a latex
condom. A SPERMICIDE is not a lubricant but it is found in many
brands of lubricants. Some people may be allergic to one or more
chemicals in spermicide.
SPONGE:
Birth control that kills sperm. A woman puts it into her vagina
before vaginal sex. SPONGES alone do not protect a man or a woman
from getting STDs. They only stop pregnancy.
STERILIZATION:
A permanent kind of contraception. Usually older people do this when
they do not want to have any more children. It is a simple operation
that stops egg and sperm from meeting each other. STERILIZATION can
be done to a man or a woman.
STRAIGHT:
Someone who has a sexual attraction for members of the opposite sex.
Another word for heterosexual.
STILL BIRTH:
When a fetus dies before or during childbirth.
STD
(Sexually Transmitted Disease): An INFECTION that is passed from
one person to another through sexual contact. This could happen
during unprotected oral, anal or vaginal sex or other close contact
with another person. STDs are caused by germs like bacteria and
viruses which like to grow in warm, moist places of people's bodies.
Many times there are no symptoms so people do not even know if they
have one. Even if a person doesn't know they have a STD they can
still give the germs to someone else. Many STDs can harm the body
permanently without showing symptoms. Women and girls might not be
able to have children. Some STDs can be passed on to the fetus
during pregnancy. Some can cause death. STDs do not go away by
themselves. People shouldn't wait too long to get checked. Some
diseases have cures but others don't. There are about 30 different
kinds of SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED DISEASES. Most birth control does not
protect a person from the germs of STDs. Some of these include the
pill, withdrawal, sterilization, and spermicide. Only latex condoms
can reduce the risk of getting an STD.
SYMPTOMS:
A sign or a signal. Medically speaking, a SYMPTOM is something that
a person can notice about him or her self or about someone else that
is a sign of a disease. Common SYMPTOMS for STDs include bumps,
blisters, or warts near the GENITALS, burning sensation when a
person URINATES, or a discharge or drip from the GENITALS. Many
people with STDs may not have any signs or SYMPTOMS. There is no
sure way to tell if someone has an STD by looking at a their body or
their genitals. Only a medical test can tell a person for sure.
SYNDROME:
A collection/group of many diseases and illnesses. They would be
different for each person. AIDS is a SYNDROME because people die
from different diseases and illnesses, not from AIDS. For people
with AIDS, the syndrome is like a cycle of illnesses that they can't
break free from.
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T
T-CELLS:
Special kind of white blood cells that are part of the immune
system. They help kill germs in the body. Doctors can count a
person's T-CELLS. Most healthy adults have about 1000 of them. If
someone has HIV and a T-CELL count lower than 200 a doctor can tell
the person they have AIDS. Counting T-CELLS is a way doctors try and
measure how the immune system is working. T-CELLS can go up and
down. They do not tell a person how they are feeling or when they
will die. People can have a low number and still feel perfectly
healthy.
TAMPON:
A long skinny tube made of cotton with a string attached to one end.
A female can put it inside her vagina during her period to soak up
any blood that will come out of her body. The vagina walls hold it
in place. TAMPONS don't hurt if they are put in properly. They can
easily be pulled out by the string that hangs out of the vagina.
TESTICLES:
Two small egg-shaped organs. They are soft and squishy and are
covered and protected by the scrotum. They hang behind the penis of
a male. The TESTICLES are what make sperm. They need to be kept at a
certain temperature. When it is hot they get larger and when it is
cold they shrink closer to the body. Slang terms: Balls, family
jewels.
TRANSFUSION:
A transfusion is donated blood from one person given to another
person when a loss of blood has occurred through surgery, an
accident, or other medical needs. The donated blood supply in the
United States is screened (or tested) for HIV, hepatitis, and other
types of blood diseases before it is used by others.
TRANSMISSION:
The ways that any kind of disease, including a STD, can be spread.
Having unprotected oral, anal, or vaginal sex, are the main ways
STDs are transmitted. STDs can't pass through human skin. They can
get through open cuts or sores and through places that have mucous
membranes like in someone's mouth, anus, vagina or penis tip. Blood,
semen, pre-seminal fluid, vaginal and cervical secretions and breast
milk are all fluids that can transmit STDs.
TRICHOMONIASIS
(TRICH): An STD which can cause VAGINITIS in women and
URETHRITIS in men. TRICHOMONIASIS can be cured with ANTIBIOTICS.
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U
URETHRA:
The small tube that carries URINE from someone's bladder to the
outside of his or her body. The opening to the URETHRA for a male is
the hole at the tip of the penis. The opening to the URETHRA for a
female is just above the opening to the vagina, and just below the
clitoris. A mucous membrane covers the URETHRA. Germs that cause
STDs can get inside someone's body through the URETHRA.
URINE:
The liquid waste that comes out of a person's URETHRA when they
URINATE (pee). Urine contains materials that the body needs to get
rid of. People cannot get STDs from other people's URINE.
URETHRITIS:
An infection of the urethra, the tube that URINE (pee) goes through
to leave the body. URETHRITIS is often caused by an STD. A person
with URETHRITIS often feels a burning sensation when he or she
urinates. URETHRITIS can be cured with ANTIBIOTICS.
UTERUS:
An empty/hollow organ that is found inside the lower pelvic area of
a female's body. It is connected to both of the fallopian tubes and
to the vagina. It is the shape and size of an upside down pear. This
is the place where a fetus grows if a woman gets pregnant. The
UTERUS is muscular and can stretch bigger as the fetus grows. After
nine months the muscles of the vagina push the fetus out of the
UTERUS. Each month, during a part of a woman's menstrual cycle the
UTERUS gets ready to help a baby grow by making thick walls of
blood. If a woman doesn't get pregnant then this blood flows out of
the body.
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V
VACCINE:
A weak mixture of VIRUSES (a kind of germ) that a scientist makes.
Since the VIRUS is either killed or weakened, the body can easily
defeat it. After the body defeats the VIRUS, it can make ANTIBODIES
that kill and easily recognize the VIRUS. The next time the VIRUS
infects the person, the body's IMMUNE SYSTEM is already prepared.
Only VIRUSES are affected by VACCINES. VACCINES only work if they
are injected BEFORE someone gets a virus.
VAGINA:
The place in a female that leads from the uterus to the outside of
the body. It is like a tunnel. It is also called a birth canal
because when a woman has a baby it comes out through here. The
VAGINA is also the place where an erect penis goes during VAGINAL
SEX. The walls of the VAGINA can stretch bigger or smaller to help
the PENIS fit. MUCUOUS MEMBRANES line the VAGINA, like a plastic bag
lines a garbage can. This makes it easy for germs that cause STDs or
other germs to get inside the body of a female. This could happen
even if the penis doesn't get inside but is near the VAGINA. Semen
or pre-seminal fluid from the penis could have germs that can cause
STDs in it and then get near/touch the opening to the VAGINA. Some
STDs are transmitted without any fluids getting inside someone
else's body. Slang terms: Box, cunt, muff, pussy, slit.
VAGINAL
SECRETIONS: A clear and slippery fluid that comes from the walls
of the vagina. It is a natural lubricant that comes out before and
during sex. This helps the penis get inside the vagina easier. It
also protects the lining of the vagina and the skin on a man's
penis. It is also a fluid that can give STDs to another person.
Slang terms: Pussy juice, honey.
VAGINAL SEX:
Sometimes called "regular" sex or intercourse. It happens
when a man puts his penis into the vagina of a woman. This can make
a woman PREGNANT if they don't use birth control. A person can also
get STDs this way if their partner has the germ. A LATEX CONDOM can
prevent PREGNANCY and transmission of a STD.
VIRGIN:
A person who has never had sex. Some people think it means someone
who has not had oral, anal or vaginal sex. Other people feel that a
virgin is someone who has had oral sex but nothing else. The word
VIRGIN means many different things to many different people.
Sometimes it is good to ask a boyfriend or girlfriend what they mean
when they say that they are a VIRGIN. Depending on what their
definition of a VIRGIN is, they might have already contracted a STD.
VIRUS:
A kind of germ that is so small it can't even be seen with a regular
microscope. Some VIRUSES can be prevented by VACCINES. VIRUSES are
the smallest and simplest of all germs, but they are also some of
the deadliest. A STD caused by a VIRUS can not be cured, but it can
be treated to help make the symptoms disappear. Herpes and HIV are
two STDs that are caused by VIRUSES. Viruses also cause the flu,
chicken pox, and malaria.
VULVA:
The sex organs outside of a female's body. They include the LABIA
and the CLITORIS. It is possible that just touching the VULVA with
the penis can cause pregnancy because sperm could swim up into the
vagina and uterus.
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W
WATER-BASED
LUBRICANT: A LUBRICANT in which the main ingredient is water.
This is good for a LATEX CONDOM because, unlike OIL-BASED
LUBRICANTS, WATER-BASED LUBRICANTS won't make or eat holes in it.
WET DREAMS:
A man or a boy might have dreams about sex while he is sleeping. If
he has an erection and then ejaculates this is a WET DREAM. It can
happen to someone without that person knowing about it. WET DREAMS
are perfectly normal and can happen at any age. WET DREAMS are
sometimes called "nocturnal emissions."
WHITE BLOOD
CELLS: One of the cells that are part of person's IMMUNE SYSTEM.
All fluids that transmit HIV have WHITE BLOOD CELLS in them.
WITHDRAWAL:
Also known as pulling out. During sex a male takes his penis out of
another person's vagina, anus or mouth before EJACULATION. This
stops semen from getting inside the person. WITHDRAWL is not
effective at preventing pregnancy or at preventing the spread of a
STD. A man's penis can leak PRE-SEMINAL FLUID which contains SPERM,
into a woman's VAGINA, without knowing it. PRE-SEMINAL FLUIDS from a
man, and VAGINAL FLUIDS from a woman, can also spread STDs before a
man EJACULATES.
WOMB:
Another word for uterus.
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Y
YEAST
INFECTION: A woman can get a YEAST INFECTION in her VAGINA when
small amounts of yeast that normally grow there go out of control.
YEAST INFECTIONS are treatable with medicine. Yeast can grow faster
if a person takes antibiotics or birth control pills for a long
time, has an allergy to yeast, or changes their diet and eats a lot
of sugar. A common SYMPTOM of a YEAST INFECTION is a white, thick,
fluid coming out of their VAGINA, but many women with YEAST
INFECTIONS have no SYMPTOMS.
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Z
ZYGOTE:
A ZYGOTE is formed when a man's sperm FERTILIZES a woman's egg. It
is the first step in what will later develop into an EMBRYO, and
then a FETUS, and finally a baby.
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