Transmasculine: Difference between revisions

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    '''Transmasculine''', sometimes abbreviated to '''transmasc''', is an [[umbrella term]] that refers to those who were assigned [[Sexes#Assigned_female_at_birth|female at birth]], and whose gender is masculine and/or who express themselves in a masculine way <ref>Mardell, A. The ABC's of LGBT+. p.98.</ref>. Transmasculine people feel a connection with masculinity, but do not always identify as male. Transmasculine people can include, but are not limited to: trans men, [[Demigender#Demiboy|demiboys]], [[multigender]] people, [[genderfluid]] people and [[nonbinary]] people, as long as they identify with masculinity. [[Transfeminine]] is the feminine equivalent of transmasculine.
    '''Transmasculine''', sometimes abbreviated to '''transmasc''', is an [[umbrella term]] that refers to those who were assigned [[Sexes#Assigned_female_at_birth|female at birth]], and whose gender is masculine and/or who express themselves in a masculine way. <ref>Mardell, A. The ABC's of LGBT+. p.98.</ref><ref name="trans bodies 620">Laura Erickson-Schroth, ed. ''Trans Bodies, Trans Selves: A Resource for the Transgender Community.'' Oxford University Press, 2014. P. 620.</ref> Transmasculine people feel a connection with masculinity, but do not always identify as male. Transmasculine people can include, but are not limited to: trans men, [[Demigender#Demiboy|demiboys]], [[multigender]] people, [[genderfluid]] people and [[nonbinary]] people, as long as they identify with masculinity. [[Transfeminine]] is the feminine equivalent of transmasculine.


    ==References==
    ==References==

    Revision as of 23:11, 25 August 2020

    Transmasculine, sometimes abbreviated to transmasc, is an umbrella term that refers to those who were assigned female at birth, and whose gender is masculine and/or who express themselves in a masculine way. [1][2] Transmasculine people feel a connection with masculinity, but do not always identify as male. Transmasculine people can include, but are not limited to: trans men, demiboys, multigender people, genderfluid people and nonbinary people, as long as they identify with masculinity. Transfeminine is the feminine equivalent of transmasculine.

    References

    1. Mardell, A. The ABC's of LGBT+. p.98.
    2. Laura Erickson-Schroth, ed. Trans Bodies, Trans Selves: A Resource for the Transgender Community. Oxford University Press, 2014. P. 620.
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