Main Page/featured articles/01: Difference between revisions

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<noinclude><big>'''January featured article'''</big>
<noinclude><big>'''January featured article'''</big>
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The European society is, in general, very binarist. However, there are a lot of cultures that, traditionally, have had more than two genders. These are some nonbinary genders recognised in other cultures:
'''Mx''' (variously pronounced as mux [IPA: məks or mʌks], mix [IPA: mɪks], em ex [IPA: ɛm ɛks], mixter [IPA: mɪkstər], or mixture) is meant to be a gender-neutral alternative to the titles Mr. and Ms. Just as the Ms title gives no marital status, the Mx title gives no gender. Mx is the most widely-known of several [[gender neutral titles]] in the English language, largely because of the work of [[nonbinary]] activists who ask [[organisations]] to [[recognition|recognize]] it. Depending on the individual, people who have nonbinary [[gender identity|gender identities]] may ask to be called Mx, or by a different gender-neutral title, or by a title that is not gender-neutral, or may ask that no titles be used for them at all.
* Bissu, calabai, and calalai (Bugis society, Indonesia)
* Hijra (Pakistan, India, Bangladesh)
* Muxe (Zapotec culture, Mexico)
* Two-spirit (Native American cultures)


<div style="background: #fff433;padding-right:5px; padding-left:5px;margin:10px;float:right;-moz-border-radius:2px;-webkit-border-radius:2px;border-radius:2px;text-align:center;font-size:0.8em;">[[Nonbinary identities worldwide|<span style="color: #000000;">More information...</span>]]</div>
<div style="background: #fff433;padding-right:5px; padding-left:5px;margin:10px;float:right;-moz-border-radius:2px;-webkit-border-radius:2px;border-radius:2px;text-align:center;font-size:0.8em;">[[Mx|<span style="color: #000000;">More information...</span>]]</div>