cissexual: difference between revisions
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rfv-failed one sense, other still open; drop "usage note" (tosh, see RFV). side note, maybe we should have a full T:trans-top-also translations table here instead of T:trans-see? Tag: Reverted |
Undo revision 70622001 by -sche (talk). rfv did not fail and was substantiated with multiples credible sources. If you'd like to merge sense once and two with gender / sex definition go right ahead, but sense two is clearly attested. Tags: Undo Reverted |
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#* '''2016''', Em McAvan, ''3: Rhetorics of Disgust and Indeterminacy in Transphobic Acts of Violence'', Tobias Raun (editor), ''Out Online: Trans Self-Representation and Community Building on YouTube'', [https://books.google.com.au/books?id=ec8eDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA54&dq=%22cissexual%22&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjvnqesqaPQAhXLipQKHbArCvYQ6AEIOzAG#v=onepage&q=%22cissexual%22&f=false page 54],
#*: Comfort is a '''cissexual''' privilege, ascribed to those who identify with and are socially and institutionally recognizable as the sex they were assigned at birth, thus conforming to a certain kind of gender norm.
# {{rfv-sense|en}} {{lb|en|of a|person}} Having a ''{{m|en|sexual}}'' identity which matches one's birth sex; when one's sexuate affinity corresponds to their gametic traits(s). For example, identifying as a ''{{m|en|biological}}'' male and having (been born with) male genitalia.† <ref>https://socialsci.libretexts.org/Bookshelves/Anthropology/Physical_Anthropology/Book%3A_Physical_Anthropology_(Schoenberg)/07%3A_Human_Variation/7.04%3A_Sex.</ref><ref>https://www.kent.edu/lgbtq/terminology-list.</ref><ref>https://www.courts.ca.gov/documents/Queertionary2.0.pdf.</ref>
# {{rfv-sense|en}} {{lb|en|of a|person|uncommon}} [[attracted|Attracted]] to people that [[identify]] as their [[biological sex]].
#: {{hypo|en|super straight}}
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===See also===
* {{l|en|transgender}}
===Usage notes===
*†Unlike '[[cisgender]]', which refers to a [[gender]] identity that matches one's birth sex, {{m|en|cissexual}} may instead refer to the alignment of one's ''[[sexual]]'' identity, which may not coincide to their sex chromosomes (in the case of [[transsexuals]]), with their birth sex. For instance, while a trans-woman may biologically identify as female, despite having male sex chromosomes, a cissexual male both identifies as a biological male (someone with an XY chromosome), and in fact possesses this genetic information. In this sense, sex is characterized by reproductive role while gender is a set of behavioral and cultural traits to which a person belongs.
===References===
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