Awareness of and familiarity with sexual anatomy can make you a much better lover. Knowing where your partner's most sensitive areas are, how those spots respond to stimulation and touch enables you to give her maximum pleasure.There's a lot more to female anatomy you might think. It's not just made of a vagina and pubic hair. There are a number of other organs which contribute to the makeup of the system. While men find it easier to unterstand their sexual anatomy--since their sexual organs hang outside the body and are constantly visible--both men and women are less familiar with female anatomy because so many of the important parts are hidden within the female's body. This section is separated into two parts: the internal and the external organs.
External Organs
The external organs is what people see when they refer to a person as male or female In a female, this would be the vulva. Most obviously, there's the pubic hair. It grows from the soft tissue called the mons pubis. That's the part seen below the abdomen, just where the pubic hair begins. Between the legs, there are the soft, fleshy outer lips, called labia majora. Inside of them are the inner lips, the labia minora, which are smaller and don't grow hair and usually have a dark pink color.
Inside the inner lips toward the top is the often small pea-shaped tip of the clitoris. The clitoris also has two internal legs that straddle each side of the vagina. The inner lips join together to form the hood of the clitoris. Further down, toward the back, is the anus, which connects to the rectum. The area between the labia minora and rectum is called the perineum.
Also within the inner lips, below the clitoris, is the urinary opening (a tiny slit that connects to your urethra, which is what your urine passes through). Below that is the opening to the vagina, which may be covered with a thin layer of tissue called the hymen. The hymen can easily stretch or tear during sports, when you use a tampon, or during other normal physical activity. Contrary to popular beliefs, the hymen does not symbolizes virginity. Therfore if the hymen stretches or tears, it doesn't mean that that person is no longer a virgin. (A female can only lose her "virginity" by having vaginal intercourse.)
Internal Organs
The following organs cannot be seen from outside the female -- they're all located in the lower abdomen. The vagina leads upward toward the cervix, which feels sort of like a nose with a little dimple in the middle. The dimple is called the os, and is the opening to the uterus. The os is plugged with mucus, and it's far too small for anything like a tampon or a finger to pass through, but not too small for infections to get in. During childbirth, however, the opening can stretch to great width. This stretching is called "dilation."
The cervix leads to the uterus, which is about the size of a pear and is very stretchable. This is necessary for a growing fetus in a pregnant woman. On either side of the uterus are the fallopian tubes. They attach to the uterus on one end, and on the other end, they have fingerlike tendrils (fimbria) that sweep over the two ovaries without being attached to them. The ovaries produce eggs and sex hormones. Once a month, a mature egg is released by one of the ovaries and is swept into a fallopian tube. If the egg encounters a sperm in the fallopian tube it becomes fertilized, travels down into the uterus, and in two out of three times, implants itself into the lining of the uterus. If the egg isn't fertilized or implantation doesn't occur, the uterus sheds its lining (which is what happens during menstruation) and the egg is expelled.

