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Demigender: Difference between revisions

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A demiboy, also called demiguy, is someone whose gender identity is only ''partly'' male, regardless of their [[sex#Gender Assigned At Birth|assigned gender at birth]].<ref>http://asexualityorg.proboards.com/index.cgi?board=gender&amp;action=print&amp;thread=9 Definitions Master List</ref> They may or may not identify as another gender<ref>http://genderqueeries.tumblr.com/identities Gender Queeries: Some Genderqueer Identities</ref> in addition to feeling partially a boy or man. They may also define their identity as both male and genderless ([[Agender|agender]]).
A demiboy, also called demiguy, is someone whose gender identity is only ''partly'' male, regardless of their [[sex#Gender Assigned At Birth|assigned gender at birth]].<ref>http://asexualityorg.proboards.com/index.cgi?board=gender&amp;action=print&amp;thread=9 Definitions Master List</ref> They may or may not identify as another gender<ref>http://genderqueeries.tumblr.com/identities Gender Queeries: Some Genderqueer Identities</ref> in addition to feeling partially a boy or man. They may also define their identity as both male and genderless ([[Agender|agender]]).


"Alternatively, demiguy can be used to describe someone assigned male at birth who feels but the barest association with that identification, though not a significant enough dissociation to create real physical discomfort or dysphoria, or someone assigned female at birth who is trans masculine but not wholly binary-identified, so that they feel more strongly associated with 'male' than 'female,' socially or physically, but not strongly enough to justify an absolute self-identification as 'man'."<ref>"Demiguy." ''Gender Wikia.'' [http://gender.wikia.com/wiki/Demiguy http://gender.wikia.com/wiki/Demiguy]</ref>
"Alternatively, demiguy can be used to describe someone assigned male at birth who feels but the barest association with that identification, though not a significant enough dissociation to create real physical discomfort or dysphoria, or someone assigned female at birth who is trans masculine but not wholly binary-identified, so that they feel more strongly associated with 'male' than 'female,' socially or physically, but not strongly enough to justify an absolute self-identification as 'man'."


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