2018, Christina Lang, "Intimacy and Desire Through the Lens of an Aro-Ace Woman of Color", thesis submitted Bates College, page 69:
Then I came across the label quoiromantic, also known as WTFromantic, which describes people who can’t tell the difference between platonic and romantic attraction.
2018, Elijah G. Stucki, "Compulsory Sexuality and Amatonormativity in Higher Education: A Photovoice Study with Asexual and Aromantic Students", thesis submitted to Oregon State University, page 128:
Lee, who is white, asexual, wtfromantic, agender, and has disabilities said that “resilience [is]...showing love for yourself.”
2018, M. Remi Yergeau, Authoring Autism: On Rhetoric and Neurological Queerness, unnumbered page:
Others yet find it core to their identities to provide thick description around what it means to experience platonic attraction (or, in some cases, queerplatonic or wtfromantic attractions).
2020, Gaia Steinberg, "The Relational Matrix: Sexuality, Romance and Coupledom in the Lives of Asexual Individuals", thesis submitted to The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, page 47:
For example, Ayelet (18, gray-a, biromantic and WTFromantic) says she sees no difference between the two, aside from the expectation for exclusivity in romance.
Noun: "(vulgar, humorous, neologism) a person of this romantic orientation"
2018, M. Remi Yergeau, Authoring Autism: On Rhetoric and Neurological Queerness, unnumbered page:
Wtfromantic, for example, is an identity that at once harnesses the queer and the disabled: wtfromantics may narrate an inability to understand the concept of romance unto itself, or they may narrate an inability to understand whether they have ever experienced romantic attraction.