Glossary of Terms Relating To Sexuality and Gender
Glossary of Terms Relating To Sexuality and Gender
Glossary of Terms Relating To Sexuality and Gender
Ally: Someone who advocates for and supports members of a community other than their own.
Reaching across differences to achieve mutual goals.
Androgynous: Someone who reflects an appearance that is both masculine and feminine, or who
appears to be neither or both a boy and a girl.
Asexual: Having no evident sex or sex organs. In usage, may refer to a person who is not sexually
active, or not sexually attracted to other people.
Bias: Prejudice; an inclination or preference, especially one that interferes with impartial judgment.
Bigendered: Refers to those who feel they have both a male and a female side to their
personalities. Some bigendered people crossdress, others may eventually have a sex-change
operation, others may do neither.
Biphobia: The irrational fear and intolerance of people who are bisexual.
Birth Sex/Sex: The sex one is assigned at birth due to the presence of whatever external sex
organs. Once this determination is made, it becomes a label used for raising the child in either one
gender image or other (either as male or female).
Bisexual: Also bi. A person who is attracted to two sexes or two genders, but not necessarily
simultaneously or equally. [This used to be defined as a person who is attracted to both genders or
both sexes, but since there are not only two sexes (see intersex and transsexual) and there are not
only two genders (see transgender), this definition is inaccurate.]
Coming out: To recognize ones sexual orientation, gender identity, or sex identity, and to be
open about it with oneself and with others.
Cross Living: Living full-time in the preferred gender image, opposite to ones assigned sex at
birth, generally in preparation for a sex change operation.
Direction: Refers to the way in which one is crossing the gender line. Masculine/Male to
Feminine/Female (MTF) is one way; Feminine/ Female to Masculine/Male (FTM) is another.
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Gender Characteristics: Refers to the primary and secondary sexual physical characteristics like
height, weight, and body hair, over which the individual has no control and which do not constitute
part of their expression or identification. Examples might include a man with a high voice, a
woman with prominent facial hair, or a person with anomalous genitalia (more correctly referred to
as intersex).
Gender Conformity: When your gender identity and sex match (i.e. fit social norms). For
example, a male who is masculine and identifies as a man.
Gender Expression/Gender Image: The way one presents oneself to the world, as either
masculine or feminine, or both or neither. This can include dress, posture, vocal inflection, and
other behavior.
Gender Identity: 1) Gender identity refers to an individuals self-awareness or fundamental
sense of themselves as being masculine or feminine, and male or female. The phrase gender
identity originated as a psychiatric term, and is commonly used to protect transsexual or
transgender employees, particularly those who transition from one sex to another on the job. 2)
The gender that a person sees oneself as. This can include refusing to label oneself with a gender.
Gender identity is also often conflated with sexual orientation, but this is inaccurate. Gender
identity does not cause sexual orientation. For example, a masculine woman is not necessarily a
lesbian.
Genderism: Holding people to traditional expectations based on gender, or punishing or excluding
those who dont conform to traditional gender expectations.
Gender-neutral: Nondiscriminatory language to describe relationshipse.g. spouse and
partner are gender-neutral alternatives to the gender-specific words husband, wife,
boyfriend and girlfriend.
Gender Queer (or Genderqueer): A person who redefines or plays with gender, or who refuses
gender altogether. A label for people who bend/break the rules of gender and blur the boundaries.
Gender Role: How masculine or feminine an individual acts. Societies commonly have norms
regarding how males and females should behave, expecting people to have personality
characteristics and/or act a certain way based on their biological sex.
Gender Stereotypes: Gender stereotypes are the patterns or mental templates for what we
expect members of each sex to be. For instance, the stereotype for males frequently includes being
tall, muscular, hirsute, solitary, and impassive. For females it might include being small, weak,
social, sensitive, and emotional.
Gender-variant / Gender non-conforming: Displaying gender traits that are not normatively
associated with their biological sex. Feminine behavior or appearance in a male is gender-variant
as is masculine behavior or appearance a female. Gender-variant behavior is culturally specific.
Genetic: refers to the chromosomal endowment of the individual, with emphasis on the sex
chromosomes (XX in women and XY in men).
Hate crime: Hate crime legislation often defines a hate crime as a crime motivated by the actual or
perceived race, color, religion, national origin, ethnicity, gender, disability, or sexual orientation of
any person.
Heterosexism: Assuming every person to be heterosexual therefore marginalizing persons who do
not identify as heterosexual. It is also believing heterosexuality to be superior to homosexuality
and all other sexual orientations.
Heterosexuality: Sexual, emotional, and/or romantic attraction to a sex other than your own.
Commonly thought of as attraction to the opposite sex but since there are not only two sexes (see
intersex and transsexual), this definition is inaccurate.
Heterosexual Privilege: Benefits derived automatically by being (or being perceived as)
heterosexual that are denied to homosexuals, bisexuals, and queers.
Homophobia: The irrational fear and intolerance of people who are homosexual or of homosexual
feelings within ones self. This assumes that heterosexuality is superior.
Homosexuality: Sexual, emotional, and/or romantic attraction to the same sex.
Institutional Oppression: Arrangement of a society used to benefit one group at the expense of
another through the use of language, media education, religion, economics, etc.
Internalized Oppression: The process by which an oppressed person comes to believe, accept, or
live out the inaccurate stereotypes and misinformation about their group.
Intersex: Intersexuality is a set of medical conditions that feature congenital anomaly of the
reproductive and sexual system. That is, intersex people are born with sex chromosomes,
external genitalia, or internal reproductive systems that are not considered standard for either
male or female. The existence of intersexuals shows that there are not just two 10 sexes and that
our ways of thinking about sex (trying to force everyone to fit into either the male box or the
female box) is socially constructed. About 1 in 2000 infants born are at risk for intersex genital
mutilation. An even higher proportion of the population is intersex in some way. This word
replaces hermaphrodite, which is generally considered impolite and/or derogatory.
In the closet: Keeping ones sexual orientation and/or gender or sex identity a secret.
Invisible minority: A group whose minority status is not always immediately visible, such as
some disabled people and LGBTIQ people. This lack of visibility may make organizing for rights
difficult.
Lambda: The Gay Activist Alliance originally chose the lambda, the Greek letter L, as a symbol
in 1970. Organizers chose the letter L to signify liberation. The word has become a way of
expressing the concept lesbian and gay male in a minimum of syllables and has been adopted by
such organizations as Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund.
Lesbian: A woman attracted to women.
LGBTIQ: Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Intersex, Queer.
Male supremacy: A system of oppression that gives power to men and values masculinity, at the
expense of women and femininity.
Marginalized: Excluded, ignored, or relegated to the outer edge of a group/society/community.
Men who have sex with men (MSM): Men who engage in same-sex behavior, but who may not
necessarily self-identify as gay.
MTF: Male to Female (transvestite or transsexual).
Non-Op: Refers to transsexuals who seek sex reassignment through hormones and who crosslive,
but stop just short of surgery. Some have concerns about major surgery, which is not always
successful, others are unable to pay for the expensive procedures surgery would entail, and still
others feel that they are complete without the surgery.
On T: When a FTM takes the hormone testosterone.
Oppression: Results from the use of institutional power and privilege where one person or group
benefits at the expense of another. Oppression is the use of power and the effects of domination.
Out or Out of the closet: Refers to varying degrees of being open about ones sexual orientation
and/or sex identity or gender identity.
Pansexual: A person who is fluid in sexual orientation and/or gender or sex identity.
Pass: Means to be in your preferred gender image and to be able to do so convincingly in the eyes
of those around you, for example an FTM or cross dresser or drag king who looks like a man and
not like a woman.
Polyamory: The practice of having multiple open, honest love relationships.
Post-Op: A transsexual who has had their sex change operation and now has the physical anatomy
which mimics that of the sex they have transitioned to.
(Institutional) Power: Means control, access and influence. In U.S. society, power means having
control of and access to ruling institutions; freedom from the threat of being questioned or
reprimanded for wrong-doing; and the ability to define standards and norms.
Present: Refers to gender expression and the process of reflecting ones gender to others; someone
who is bigendered may present as female one day and male the next.
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Pre-Op: A transsexual who has not yet had their sex change operation(s) but who plans on having
it/them.
Privilege: Means a right, a favor, an immunity or an advantage specially granted to one individual
or group and withheld from another.
Queer: 1) An umbrella term used to refer to all LGBTIQ people. 2) A political statement, as well
as a sexual orientation, which advocates breaking binary thinking and seeing both sexual 14
orientation and gender identity as potentially fluid. 3) A simple label to explain a complex set of
sexual behaviors and desires. For example, a person who is attracted to multiple genders may
identify as queer. Many older LGBT people feel the word has been hatefully used against them for
too long and are reluctant to embrace it. 4) Originally a synonym for odd, this word became a
derogatory expression for gays in the 20th Century. Even though many people still use queer as
an anti-gay epithet, a movement emerged in the 1980s that calls itself queer. Used in this way,
queer means sexually dissident, but not necessarily gay. Many gays, transsexuals, bisexuals and
even heterosexuals whose sexuality doesnt fit into the cultural standard of monogamous
heterosexual marriage have adopted the queer label. In academic circles, the term queer often
refers to the approaches and sensibilities of queer theory.
Racism: Discrimination against people of color that results from the white supremacy system of
domination. Racism is prejudice plus institutional power.
Rainbow Flag: The Rainbow Freedom Flag was designed in 1978 by Gilbert Baker to designate
the great diversity of the LGBTIQ community. It has been recognized by the International Flag
Makers Association as the official flag of the LGBTIQ civil rights movement.
Self-Identify: Refers to the process of people choosing with which identifying terms/groups they
identify. (E.g. Someone could self-identify as male, female or bigendered, multi-racial, etc.)
Sex: Refers to a person based on their anatomy (external genitalia, chromosomes, and internal
reproductive system). Sex terms are male, female, transsexual, and intersex. Sex is biological,
although social views and experiences of sex are cultural.
Sex Identity: The sex that a person sees themselves as. This can include refusing to label oneself
with a sex.
Sexism: Discrimination against women that results from the male supremacy system of oppression.
Sex-Reassignment Surgery (SRS): Sex change operation.
Sexual minority: 1) Refers to members of sexual orientations or who engage in sexual activities
that are not part of the mainstream. 2) Refers to members of sex groups that do not fall into the
majority categories of male or female, such as intersexuals and transsexuals.
Trans Man/Male: A female-to-male transition (FTM). [The medical literature tends to use the
extremely demeaning term female transsexual to mean the same thing. Note that you can tell the
preferred form is in use when the gender word comes after the T word.]
Transphobia: 1) Discrimination, fear or hatred of people who blur traditional gender lines that
results from the gender binary system. Often comes from ones own insecurity about being a real
man, or a real woman. 2) Fear or hatred of transgender people; transphobia is manifested in a
number of ways, including violence, harassment and discrimination.
Transsexual: Refers to a person who experiences a mismatch of the biological sex they were born
as and the biological sex they identify as. A transsexual sometimes undergoes medical treatment to
change his/her physical sex to match his/her sex identity through hormone treatments and/or
surgically. [Transexuals are included in the umbrella term transgender, but not all transgendered
people are transsexual. See also gender, sex, transgender.]
Transvestite/Cross Dresser: Individuals who regularly or occasionally wear the clothing socially
assigned to a gender not their own, but are usually comfortable with their anatomy and do not wish
to change it (i.e. they are not transsexuals). Cross-dresser is the preferred term for men who enjoy
or prefer womens clothing and social roles. Contrary to popular belief, the overwhelming majority
of male cross-dressers identify as straight and often are married. Very few women call themselves
cross dressers.
Triangle: A symbol of remembrance. Gay men in the Nazi concentration camps were forced to
wear the pink triangle as a designation of being homosexual. Women who did not conform to
social roles, often believed to be lesbians, had to wear the black triangle. The triangles are worn
today as symbols of freedom, reminding us to never forget.