Agender

Agender is the lack of gender. It is a non-binary gender in which one is not male, female, or any other gender.

While some agender individuals completely lack gender, others may call themselves agender for other reason, such as: their gender is neutral or neutrois, their gender is unknown or undefinable, their gender does not align with any binary or non-binary categories, or they do not care about gender as a label.

Agender people may also identify as non-binary, genderqueer, or transgender, though some choose to avoid these terms since they can imply that they identify as a gender, when they in fact do not.

Agender vs Gender Neutral
There is little agreement about the difference between terms such as agender, gender neutral and neutrois. Some people use these terms interchangeably; for others there is a difference between these terms. It is often said that agender is the experience of having no gender at all, whereas gender neutral or neutrois is the experience of having a gender identity, a gender identity which is not male or female, but neutral.

Agender vs Gendervoid
Gendervoid, also called voidgender, is similar to agender, and the two terms are sometimes used interchangeably. However, while they do overlap, they are not always the same. Agender is a more broad term that sometimes encompasses neutral genders. While an agender person may also feel as though they never had a gender in the first place, a gendervoid person may feel like there is an empty place where a gender would or should be.

History
The first recorded use of the word agender on the internet seems to come from a post on the site UseNet, on July 28, 2000. It was used in a discussion thread titled "alt.messianic". The user Miriam Wolfe wrote "All I understand is that G-d is amorphous, agender, etc. so "image" can't be a physical or gender or sexual thing." There were a few other instances of the word being used around the same time, but these also were either about God or were talking about people presenting in a gender-neutral manner (not as specific gender identity).

The first instance where the word was used about people as a specific identity seems to also come for UseNet, in a thread titled "alt.politics.democrats". The user man_in_black529 wrote "But despite this near-universality of gender, cultures can have transgender, agender, and hypergender individuals."

In both these cases the word agender was not defined, presumably, the definition was already known at the time. It's safe to assume that the word agender existed before these posts, and possibly had a similar meaning to what it does now. However, earlier uses of the word are not recorded.

Flags
The original agender flag was designed by the Tumblr user Transrants in 2014. The color meanings are as follows: Black represents an absence of gender, and grey represents partial gender. Green represents the non-binary nature of this gender because green is the inverse of lavender (a mixture of pink and blue, meaning a mix of female and male).

Variations on the agender flag usually include green and black.

The four-stripe agender flag is an homage to the original, widely-used seven-stripe agender flag created by Salem in 2014. They are similar in color scheme (black, gray, white, green). However, the four-stripe agender flag has a deliberately higher-contrast design with fewer stripes and emphasizes the community and inclusion of agender people who may also be lesbian, gay, bi, nonbinary, trans, ace, etc. by representing all agenderness in one stripe. No matter what else they are, all agender people are wholly equally agender. The four-stripe agender flag also has the advantage of being shrinkable down to four pixels tall.

One interpretation of the colors of the four-stripe agender flag, from top to bottom, is: safety, unity, and the night sky (black), cement and ash (gray), bones (white), and the feeling of living and being agender (pure green).