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| {{Side list | |||
| |title = Most used titles | |||
| |content = | |||
| # Mx (32.6%) | |||
| # No title (32.2%) | |||
| # Mr (8.5%) | |||
| # Ms (5.7%) | |||
| # Neutral professional title (5.4%) | |||
| # Miss (3.5%) | |||
| # Ind (3%) | |||
| Data provided by the 2018 Gender Census.<ref name="Census2018"/> | |||
| }} | |||
| A '''gender neutral title''' is an alternative to the gendered honorifics Miss, Mrs, Ms and Mr, for people who don't fit the [[gender binary]] and therefore don't feel that a gendered title fits their identity. It is used in formal situations when it is inappropriate to refer to someone by their first or last name only. However, there is quite a lot of people who would prefer to never be referred to with a title. In the 2018 Gender Census, 32.2% of respondents didn't want to use a title for themselves.<ref name="Census2018" /> | A '''gender neutral title''' is an alternative to the gendered honorifics Miss, Mrs, Ms and Mr, for people who don't fit the [[gender binary]] and therefore don't feel that a gendered title fits their identity. It is used in formal situations when it is inappropriate to refer to someone by their first or last name only. However, there is quite a lot of people who would prefer to never be referred to with a title. In the 2018 Gender Census, 32.2% of respondents didn't want to use a title for themselves.<ref name="Census2018" /> | ||