Content added Content deleted
(Adding categories) |
m (quote) |
||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
Yet neuter is described as a grammatical gender parallel with/to masculine and feminine,<ref>https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q1775461</ref> it's not commonly used as a gender identity or experience, therefore neuter is equiparable to [[both]] [[none]] and [[neither]]. |
Yet neuter is described as a grammatical gender parallel with/to masculine and feminine,<ref>https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q1775461</ref> it's not commonly used as a gender identity or experience, therefore neuter is equiparable to [[both]] [[none]] and [[neither]]. |
||
It can also be a translation of the Portuguese neolingual term neutre, which is an [[Other|othergender]] balancing [[positive]], [[negative]], and [[null]], hence it's adherently a gender quality, that is essentially not [[Gender Presentation|presentational]].<ref>https://identidades.wikia.org/pt-br/wiki/Outrog%C3%AAneros |
|||
#https://identidades.wikia.org/pt-br/wiki/Positive |
#https://identidades.wikia.org/pt-br/wiki/Positive |
||
#https://identidades.wikia.org/pt-br/wiki/Negative |
#https://identidades.wikia.org/pt-br/wiki/Negative |
||
#https://identidades.wikia.org/pt-br/wiki/Espectro_neutro |
#https://identidades.wikia.org/pt-br/wiki/Espectro_neutro |
||
##https://identidades.wikia.org/pt-br/wiki/Neutrois</ref |
##https://identidades.wikia.org/pt-br/wiki/Neutrois</ref> |
||
== Resources == |
== Resources == |
||
[[Category:Gender Quality]] |
[[Category:Gender Quality]] |
Revision as of 13:31, 19 May 2021
Neuter is an unlabelled experience similar to neutrois or gender-neutral. It's different in the sense that one refuses to define oneself under a gender term.[1]
Yet neuter is described as a grammatical gender parallel with/to masculine and feminine,[2] it's not commonly used as a gender identity or experience, therefore neuter is equiparable to both none and neither.
It can also be a translation of the Portuguese neolingual term neutre, which is an othergender balancing positive, negative, and null, hence it's adherently a gender quality, that is essentially not presentational.[3]