Knowledge

User:Tamzin/Gender

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137:, not that I am either of those things). I still try to find neuter options when available in binary-gendered languages, but not when they'd go against the language's norms ( 129:
I refer to myself with feminine terms in cases where a binary grammatical gender is required (principally in other languages, but occasionally with English words like
155: 23: 214:, then by all means. By picking a word, you make it the correct one, at least for that moment, at least for you and me. 140: 222:, my requested pronouns are those of the article's most recent editor. This can be automated with code such as 185: 51:
Gender is an emergent property of our interactions with others. Who am I to tell you how to gender me?
154:
When talking about myself pre-transition, I usually (but not always) do so in the masculine and with
42: 218:
One exception: If you find yourself writing about me in mainspace, then for the purposes of
99:. (I pronounce it like "mix", but I've heard "em-ex" too and think that also sounds nice.) 8: 34: 228:|{{REVISIONUSER}}}}}} widely considered the worst administrator in Knowledge history. 225: 166: 92: 110:), including cases where a masculine or feminine term is also used neutrally ( 170: 219: 207: 178: 17: 198:. What is gender but the product of how you see me? If you see me as a 96: 59: 174: 162: 102:
I refer to myself with grammatically neuter terms when possible (
54:
If you'd like to refer to me the way I refer to myself, that's:
211: 71: 87: 146: 138: 194:And if you wouldn't like to refer to me that way, 182: 14: 126:, not that I am any of those things). 30: 31: 238: 177:. I rarely refer to myself as 13: 1: 7: 147: 139: 10: 243: 32: 183: 58:I refer to myself with 206:and a woman, or as a 161:I refer to myself as 145:, not the anglicized 22:(Redirected from 234: 229: 202:and a man, or a 190: 184:toki pona la mi 150: 144: 141:kabbalat mitzvah 77: 65: 45: 27: 242: 241: 237: 236: 235: 233: 232: 231: 223: 216: 196:that's fine too 75: 63: 49: 48: 41: 37: 29: 28: 21: 20: 12: 11: 5: 240: 192: 191: 159: 152: 127: 100: 93:courtesy title 83: 47: 46: 43:User:Tamzin/🤷 38: 33: 24:User:Tamzin/🤷 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 239: 230: 227: 221: 215: 213: 209: 205: 201: 197: 189: 187: 180: 176: 172: 168: 164: 160: 157: 156:my birth name 153: 149: 143: 142: 136: 132: 128: 125: 121: 117: 113: 109: 105: 101: 98: 94: 90: 89: 84: 81: 80: 74: 69: 68: 62: 57: 56: 55: 52: 44: 40: 39: 36: 25: 19: 224:{{ucfirst:{{ 220:MOS:GENDERID 217: 203: 199: 195: 193: 134: 130: 123: 119: 115: 111: 107: 103: 86: 78: 72: 66: 60: 53: 50: 208:transsexual 179:transgender 91:as both my 18:User:Tamzin 210:, or as a 167:nonbinary 148:b'mitzvah 97:honorific 82:pronouns. 226:they are 175:feminine 135:princess 35:Shortcut 169:, and ( 163:agender 108:sibling 95:and my 212:femboy 112:master 104:person 85:I use 186:tonsi 171:trans 120:witch 16:< 131:aunt 116:hero 67:them 61:they 204:she 133:or 124:cow 88:Mx. 79:xem 70:or 200:he 181:. 165:, 151:). 122:, 118:, 114:, 106:, 73:xe 188:. 173:) 158:. 76:/ 64:/ 26:)

Index

User:Tamzin
User:Tamzin/🤷
Shortcut
User:Tamzin/🤷
they/them
xe/xem
Mx.
courtesy title
honorific
kabbalat mitzvah
my birth name
agender
nonbinary
trans
feminine
transgender
tonsi
transsexual
femboy
MOS:GENDERID
they are

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