"Life isn't Binary." - The Enby Qafe celebrates being both, beyond, and in-between with this book about gender identity.
Lets figure out the LGBTQIA+ gender identity terminology together!
Why did we chose to write this book, listing different gender identities?
First off all, because we want you to know you are not alone. Just look at the long list below, isn't is beautiful!
And If you can't find a label that fits you, then that is okey! We are all unique and that is the beauty of it all. And we only listed the most common ones, if you feel we missed one, please mention it in the comments.
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Gender identity is the personal sense of one's own.
Gender identity can correlate with a person's at birth or can differ from it. Gender expression typically reflects a person's gender identity, but this is not always the case. While a person may express behaviors, attitudes, and appearances consistent with a particular gender role, such expression may not necessarily reflect their gender identity.
Agender
A person who is agender does not identify with any particular gender, or they may have no gender at all.
Other terms for this may include:
neutral gendernull-gendergenderlessneutrois
Androgyne
A person who identifies as androgyne has a gender that is either both masculine and feminine or between masculine and feminine.
Bigender
A person who identifies as bigender has .
People who are bigender often display cultural masculine and feminine roles.
Cisgender
A cisgender person identifies with the sex that they were assigned at birth.
For example, a cisgender woman is someone who still identifies with the sex — female, in this case — a doctor assigned them at birth.
Gender expansive
The LGBTQIA+ Resource center define gender expansive as an "umbrella term used for individuals who broaden their own culture's commonly held definitions of gender, including expectations for its expression, identities, roles, and/or other perceived gender norms."
Those who are gender expansive include people who are transgender and people whose gender broadens the surrounding society's notion of what gender is.
Genderfluid
A person who identifies as genderfluid has a gender identity and presentation that shifts between, or shifts outside of, society's expectations of gender.
Gender outlaw
A person who identifies as a gender outlaw refuses to allow society's definition of "male" or "female" to define them.
Genderqueer
A person who identifies as genderqueer has a gender identity or expression that is not the same as society's expectations for their assigned sex or assumed gender.
Genderqueer can also refer to a person who identifies outside of how society defines gender or someone who identifies with a combination of genders.
Nonbinary
A person who identifies as nonbinary does not experience gender within the gender binary.
People who are nonbinary may also experience overlap with different gender expressions, such as being gender non-conforming.
Omnigender
A person who identifies as omnigender experiences and possesses all genders.
Polygender and pangender
People who identify as polygender or pangender experience and display parts of multiple genders.
Transgender
This is an umbrella term that encompasses all people who experience and identify with a different gender than that which their assigned sex at birth would suggest.
Although most people think of trans men and trans women when hearing the word transgender, this term also encompasses people who identify as a gender other than man or woman, including nonbinary and genderfluid.
Trans
Trans is a more inclusive term that covers those who identify as nonbinary and those who are genderless, according to the LGBTQIA+ Resource center.
Two Spirit
Two Spirit is an umbrella term that encompasses different sexualities and genders in Indigenous Native American communities.
There are many different definitions of Two Spirit, and Indigenous Native American people may or may not use this term to describe their experiences and feelings of masculinity and femininity.
This is a cultural term that is reserved for those who identify as an Indigenous Native American.