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Citations:stargender

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English citations of stargender

Adjective: "(neologism) having a gender identity that is unknowable or otherworldly"

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2020 2021 2022
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  • 2020, endever corbin, "I'm trans and autistic, and yes (for me), they're related", in Spectrums: Autistic Transgender People in Their Own Words (ed. Maxfield Sparrow), page 85:
    As far as I can tell I'm often at least a tiny bit stargender, a tiny bit dryagender, and a tiny bit fasciboy, but at some times might not be all of them at once.
  • 2021, Adriana Sisko, "'My Gender is Lesbian': Community Building and the Endurance of the Lesbian in Queer Times", dissertation submitted to the University of Kentucky, page 80:
    The terminologies that populate the MOGAI umbrella are innumerable, constantly multiplying, and tend to 1) allow for splitting between romantic and sexual attraction, 2) allow for gender modalities beyond cisgender and transgender (ex: centrgender, those who do not identify as cisgender or transgender), 3) allows for stacking of multiple identity modes (ex: a bigender asexual lesbian is an individual that identifies as two genders, does not experience sexual attraction, but does experience romantic attraction and/or affinity toward women), and 4) bases the validity of one’s gender and sexual identity in that individual’s personal experience (meaning, if one identifies as stargender, an individual with an other-wordly or non-human gender, then their identity is valid as it is derived from their feelings).
  • 2022, Clare Margot Killman, "The Coming Gendered Interrelations of Power, Journalism, and the Media", in Redefining Journalism in an Age of Technological Advancements, Changing Demographics, and Social Issues (eds. Phylis Johnson & Ian Punnett), page 231:
    In college I got to meet other stargender people like me for the first time.
  • 2022, Cameron, quoted in Spencer A. Garrison, "'Trans Enough' for Tumblr?: Gender Accountability and Identity Challenge in Online Communities for Trans and Non-Binary Youth", dissertation submitted to the University of Michigan, page 163:
    ...I feel like Tumblr was one of the first places that had an active online trans community. And I think a lot of people who didn’t know that interacted with the trans community at first blush, and we do this thing on Tumblr where we, like -- you know, we talk about our gender, and a lot of us are, like, really hyperbolic about it?...and [so] Tumblr was also a hotbed of, you know, what I call ‘vanity genders’...[outsiders] see this shit, and they’re like, ‘this person isn’t really trans. They are a ‘stargender!’” And, you know, that brings the trolls, and the trolls are like, ‘can you believe these millennial cucks going around calling themselves ‘stargender?’ How am I supposed to take that seriously? What do I tell my kids?’

Noun: "(neologism) a person with such a gender identity"

[edit]
2022
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 2022, Cameron, quoted in Spencer A. Garrison, "'Trans Enough' for Tumblr?: Gender Accountability and Identity Challenge in Online Communities for Trans and Non-Binary Youth", dissertation submitted to the University of Michigan, page 163:
    ...I feel like Tumblr was one of the first places that had an active online trans community. And I think a lot of people who didn’t know that interacted with the trans community at first blush, and we do this thing on Tumblr where we, like -- you know, we talk about our gender, and a lot of us are, like, really hyperbolic about it?...and [so] Tumblr was also a hotbed of, you know, what I call ‘vanity genders’...[outsiders] see this shit, and they’re like, ‘this person isn’t really trans. They are a ‘stargender!’” And, you know, that brings the trolls, and the trolls are like, ‘can you believe these millennial cucks going around calling themselves ‘stargender?’ How am I supposed to take that seriously? What do I tell my kids?’