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|  | {{Personal story
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|  | | quote = I discovered that I was transgender after joking around in the art room in 8th grade, (when I was 12) and one of my friends, who was also LGBTQ+, said that the charcoal on my face looked like makeup that a transgender guy would wear. I was stunned into silence.
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|  | | name = Dalton
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|  | | age = 15
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|  | | identity = nonbinary transmasculine
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|  | '''Transgender''' isan umbrella term covering all gender identities or expressions that transgress or transcend society’s rules and concepts of gender. To be trans usually means to identify as a gender other than the [[Assigned gender at birth|gender one was assigned at birth]].  The category of transgender includes people who have the [[binary genders|binary gender]] identities of female ([[transgender women]]) or male ([[transgender men]]), and is often framed solely in binary terms. The transgender umbrella does include people with [[nonbinary]] gender identities, but not all non-binary people refer to themselves as transgender.
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|  | ==Symbols== |  | ==Symbols== | 
		Revision as of 04:51, 17 December 2019
There is only twp genders
Symbols
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- The transgender symbol, made of a combination of male (Mars), female (Venus), and a mix of both. Colors are optional.
 
 
 
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			- Trans Pride Flag.png - 
- The transgender pride flag, designed by trans woman Monica Helms in 1999, with stripes representing male (blue), female (pink), and other or transitioning (white).
 
 
 
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- In 2002 Jennifer Pellinen created a transgender flag [1] Pink & blue stripes: female and male. The middle three purple stripes represent the diversity of the transgender community and genders other than female and male.[2]
 
 
 
References
External Links
Further reading
- Girshick, Lori B. Transgender Voices: Beyond Women and Men. Hanover: University Press of New England, 2008. Print.
- Stryker, Susan. Transgender History. Berkeley, CA: Seal Press, 2008. Print.
- Stryker, Susan, and Stephen Whittle. The Transgender Studies Reader. New York: Routledge, 2006. Print.
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