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The wiki dedicated to the promotion of non-binary gender identities
Non-binary wiki was created in the 1st of February, 2017, after the original Nonbinary.org Wiki went down. Luckily, the Wayback machine had a copy of it. Our current goal is to build a new wiki taking the articles from the old wiki, adding them here and improving them.
Since the day of its creation, 978 users have been working on 962 articles.
Non-binary is a term that refers to those people whose gender is not male nor female. It can be neither, both, a third one or it can also change over time. Non-binary people fall under the transgender umbrella term, and non-binary is an umbrella term itself, although some people use it to describe their gender identity too.
Click on the blue words above or explore the wiki to learn more about non-binary identities!
This site is a wiki, meaning that anybody (including you) can make a contribution to it. You don't even need to create an account, although it's strongly recommended. These are some things you can do to contribute:
- Edit an existing article. Search any page and improve its content! You can also expand a stub.
- Go to the list of wanted pages and create one of them! (You can take as a reference the old Nonbinary.org wiki)
- Spread the word. If you know somebody questioning their gender, tell them about this wiki. If you don't know anybody questioning their gender, tell them anyway!
People use clothes as a way of talk without words, to tell others what kind of person they are. However, because gender identity is different than gender expression, a person's gender identity may or may not correlate with how they wear their hair or clothes. For example, if someone likes to wear clothes from the women's wear department, or feminine accessories, that doesn't necessarily mean that they identify as a woman. There is no set style or guidelines for nonbinary presentation due to the diversity of identities encompassed within these terms. Clothing links and descriptions may be identity-specific as well as subject to variation by the individual. For example, a person identifying as an androgyne may not necessarily wish to present as androgynous. Some nonbinary people like clothes that don't give any female or male markers (gender-neutral fashion). Other nonbinary people like clothes that mix female and male markers (mixed-gender fashion). Yet other nonbinary people wear clothes that are very similar to either conventional women's wear or conventional men's wear.