Feminamoric

Feminamoric is a diamoric orientation that refers to non-binary and/or genderqueer folken who are attracted exclusively to women.

The term was created because most other ways to say that one is attracted to women involve the assumption of one's gender. For example, a straight individual attracted to women is typically a man. A gay or lesbian individual attracted to women is typically a woman. Although some non-binary folken have also adopted this framing of their orientation, some non-binary folken are uncomfortable with this, and found the term feminamoric useful for specifying a non-binary individual attracted to women.

The masculine counterpart to feminamoric is viramoric. The non-binary counterpart is ceteramoric. A similar term is gynosexual, though some folken are uncomfortable identifying with this term as it can have transphobic implications.

History
The first usage of the term, alongside feminamoric, was in an anonymous tumblr ask to Tumblr user Marlowelune in May 12, 2017. A follow up definition also sent anonymously was posted on the same day.

The term is styled after diamoric and comes from the Latin words femina, meaning "woman", and amor, meaning "love".

Flag
In the original flag, there were 5 stripes: maroon, white, pink, white, olive green. Some colors were borrowed from the genderqueer and diamoric flag. The creator and history of the original flag is unknown.

In several proposed new feminamoric flag shades of blue are used to represent non-binary or genderqueer folken's attraction to women, for numerous reasons (the Venus symbol is used to symbolize women, the clouds covering the planet Venus' surface are blue, and the mythological roman goddess Venus emerged from the sea when she was born).

In the "yellow banner" non-binary version of the flag by demisexual-yuri, feuillyadeux, bizexuals, and justfolieadoit, the non-binary colors dominate the flag to show that the individual's non-binary-ness is central to the attraction and is what makes the attraction inherently non-straight. The yellow stripes at the side represent women, as Venus is seen as the "female" planet, and is yellow.