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    Adgender: Difference between revisions

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    '''Adgender''' is a [[Gender Modality|gender modality]] that refers to someone who moves towards a given gender, or gender [[Gender Presentation|presentation]]. It is slightly more inclusive than terms like [[transmasculine]] and [[transfeminine]] as it includes people who wouldn’t be included by [[Transgender|trans]]. Examples include:
    '''Adgender''' is a [[Gender Modality|gender modality]] that refers to someone who moves towards a given gender, or gender [[Gender Presentation|presentation]]. It is slightly more inclusive than terms like [[transmasculine]] and [[transfeminine]] as it includes people who wouldn’t be included by [[Transgender|trans]]. Examples include:
    * An [[Assigned Gender|AFAB]] [[bigender]] person who has been on testosterone and now needs to do the same things as transfeminine people to pass on days where they feel like a girl. This person wouldn't be transmasculine but adfeminine.
    * An [[Assigned Gender|AFAB]] [[bigender]] person who has been on testosterone and now needs to do the same things as transfeminine people to pass on days where they feel like a girl. This person wouldn't be transmasculine but adfeminine.
    * A male headmate in a system who has to dress the body of the [[Cisgender|cis]] woman host when they front in order to feel themself would be admasculine.
    * A male headmate in a [[system]] who has to dress the body of the [[Cisgender|cis]] woman host when they front in order to feel themself would be admasculine.
    * A cis man with [[Kallman Syndrome|Kallmann syndrome]] who chooses to take testosterone might consider themself admasculine.
    * A cis man with [[Kallman Syndrome|Kallmann syndrome]] who chooses to take testosterone might consider themself admasculine.
    * An AFAB [[Non-Binary|non-binary]] [[femme]] might call themself adfeminine because they feel like they’re transitioning into a different kind of femininity than the heteronormative role they were assigned at birth.
    * An AFAB [[Non-Binary|non-binary]] [[femme]] might call themself adfeminine because they feel like they’re transitioning into a different kind of femininity than the heteronormative role they were assigned at birth.
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