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Glossary of Chinese gender and sex terminology: Difference between revisions

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(update with font that does render the new character)
Tag: 2017 source edit
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Tag: 2017 source edit
 
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| 𲎿
| 𲎿
| tā
| tā
| A non-binary third-person [[pronoun]], added to the Unicode standard at code point U+323BF in 2025, but not yet rendered by most fonts (One font that does is [https://github.com/lxgw/LxgwWenKai-Lite/releases LxgwWenKai-Lite]. It is composed of “乂” (left) and “也” (right). Due to the technical difficulty of using it, the character has often been written “X也” in the past. (At the same time, a specifically male version – 𲰼, code point U+32C3C – was also added, composed of “男” (meaning “male”, left) and “也” (right). Both characters are listed in Unicode block “[https://www.unicode.org/charts/PDF/U323B0.pdf CJK Unified Ideographs Extension J]”.)
| A non-binary third-person [[pronoun]], added to the Unicode standard at code point U+323BF in 2025, but not yet rendered by most fonts (One font that does is [https://github.com/lxgw/LxgwWenKai-Lite/releases LxgwWenKai-Lite]). It is composed of “乂” (left) and “也” (right). Due to the technical difficulty of using it, the character has often been written “X也” in the past. (At the same time, a specifically male version – 𲰼, code point U+32C3C – was also added, composed of “男” (meaning “male”, left) and “也” (right). Both characters are listed in Unicode block “[https://www.unicode.org/charts/PDF/U323B0.pdf CJK Unified Ideographs Extension J]”.)
|-
|-
|同性恋
|同性恋
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