ANSWERS: 9
  • very carefully
  • from their urethra
  • through the dominant genital set I presume?
  • Hermaphroditism (in humans, anyway, I can't speak with authority on anything else) involves the reproductive tracts. The majority of cases do not involve a fully formed set of female and male genitalia, but rather some combination of the two. Often neither sets are functional. Externally, the phallus may be structurally somewhere between a clitoris and a penis, and labia may be fused or scrotum cleaved to various degrees. Urination is a function of the excretory system (kidneys, ureters, bladder, urethra) and is not usually compromised in hermaphroditism. There is one case of a hermaphrodite in which the urethra carried both menstrual blood and urine out of the body, but usually it exits the body through some area of the genital region and urination is normal.
  • Sitting down. Most hermaphrodites present themselves as being female in society, so they use the ladies room.
  • http://www.isna.org/faq/hermaphrodite
  • The word "hermaphrodite" suggests someone with complete male and female genitalia, but no such person really exists. What does exist are "intersex" people with "ambiguous genitalia." The specifics of what that means/looks like differs from person to person. Even a person called a "hermaphrodite" will only have 1 functional urethra, so whichever one they have (either one that goes through the penis or one that goes to the vulva), that's the one they'd use. Edit: The source I used for the above information was one previously posted by another user, I never tried to hide that, but perhaps I should have posted it here as well, to avoid confusion, so here it is: http://www.isna.org/faq/hermaphrodite.
  • The same way everyone else does!

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