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Clitoris and the penis - differentiation

44 bytes added, 15:47, 18 December 2023
Add category; Wikify.
<youtube>FcR7NLzHNtA</youtube>
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{{WikipediaQuote |URL=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clitoris#Homology |title=Clitoris: Homology}}
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The [[clitoris]] and [[penis]] are generally the same anatomical structure, although the distal portion (or opening) of the [[urethra]] is absent in the [[clitoris]] of humans and most other animals. The idea that males have [[clitoris]]es was suggested in 1987 by researcher Josephine Lowndes Sevely, who theorized that the male corpora cavernosa (a pair of sponge-like regions of erectile tissue which contain most of the blood in the [[penis ]] during penile [[erection]]) are the true counterpart of the [[clitoris]]. She argued that "the male [[clitoris]]" is directly beneath the rim of the [[glans penis]], where the frenulum of prepuce of the penis (a fold of the prepuce) is located, and proposed that this area be called the "Lownde's crown." Her theory and proposal, though acknowledged in anatomical literature, did not materialize in anatomy books.<ref>{{REFbook
|last=Frayser
|first=Suzanne G.
[[Category:Video about anatomy of the genitalia]]
[[Category:Female sexuality]]
[[Category:Male sexuality]]
[[Category:From IntactWiki]]
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