Genderfluid: Difference between revisions

913 bytes added ,  3 months ago
m
Reverted edits by 100.101.254.78 (talk) to last revision by Zopilote
(I change the "Day in menstrual cycle" column to something more realistic because periods that last 14-15 days should be checked out by a doctor, as the normally last 2-7 days.)
Tags: Reverted Visual edit
m (Reverted edits by 100.101.254.78 (talk) to last revision by Zopilote)
Tag: Rollback
 
(4 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 31: Line 31:
<!--T:57-->
<!--T:57-->
In the 1990s and 2000s, it might have been more common for genderfluid people to call themselves [[bigender]] or [[genderqueer]]. Earlier than that, they may have called themselves [[cross-dresser]]s.
In the 1990s and 2000s, it might have been more common for genderfluid people to call themselves [[bigender]] or [[genderqueer]]. Earlier than that, they may have called themselves [[cross-dresser]]s.
Linguistic research by Zimman and Hayworth suggests that the term "genderfluid" appeared the discourse of gender-related [[Livejournal]] communities in the '00s. The term "genderfluid" was present in entries and comments from the "ftm" and "genderqueer" communities, though it was less common than "genderqueer" or "genderfuck".<ref>Zimman, Lal, and Hayworth, Will. "How we got here: Short-scale change in identity labels for trans, cis, and non-binary people in the 2000s". 2020. Proc Ling Soc Amer 5(1). 499–513. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.3765/plsa.v5i1.4728</nowiki></ref><ref>Zimman, Lal, and Hayworth, Will. "Lexical Change as Sociopolitical Change in Trans and Cis Identity Labels: New Methods for the Corpus Analysis of Internet Data". ''Selected Papers from New Ways of Analyzing Variation (NWAV 47)''. January 15 2020. <nowiki>https://repository.upenn.edu/handle/20.500.14332/45253</nowiki></ref>


<!--T:8-->
<!--T:8-->
Line 70: Line 72:
|<translate><!--T:20--> 2013-03-09</translate>
|<translate><!--T:20--> 2013-03-09</translate>
|<translate><!--T:21--> Male (all day)</translate>
|<translate><!--T:21--> Male (all day)</translate>
|3
|14
|-
|-
|<translate><!--T:22--> 2013-03-10</translate>
|<translate><!--T:22--> 2013-03-10</translate>
|<translate><!--T:23--> Male, then female</translate>
|<translate><!--T:23--> Male, then female</translate>
|4
|15
|}
|}
<translate><!--T:24-->
<translate><!--T:24-->