×
Create a new article
Write your page title here:
We currently have 7,593 articles on LGBTQIA+ Wiki. Type your article name above or create one of the articles listed here!



    LGBTQIA+ Wiki
    7,593Articles
    in:

    LGBTQIA+ Wiki:Article Guidelines: Difference between revisions

    Content added Content deleted
    mNo edit summary
    m (Changed links. Will probably merge this with Creating_and_Editing_Pages and Bans_and_warnings pages.)
     
    (160 intermediate revisions by 9 users not shown)
    Line 1: Line 1:
    {{Tocright}}
    (''Check out our [[Formatting Guidelines|example page]], for a more concise explanation of the formatting.)''
    All articles and edits must follow WikiTide's [https://meta.wikitide.org/wiki/Content_Policy content policy] as well as the style guide [[LGBTA+_Wiki:Creating_and_Editing_Pages|for this wiki]].


    You are responsible for making sure your page meets the standards listed here and in the style guide. If minor aspects are wrong, it can be edited, but if major sections are wrong or missing, or the page is incomprehensible, then it will be deleted.
    The LGBTA+ wikia is intended to be a resource to learn about sexualities and genders, particularly those that don't have much information about them online. You do not have to ask before making pages but it's recommended that you read this page or the [[Formatting Guidelines|formatting guidelines]] page to ensure your page meets our standards.
    ==Rules==
    # Obviously follow the [[Community Guidelines|community guidelines]]. Hate speech will result in an indefinite ban, this including anything that promotes TERF, truscum, or exclusionist ideology.
    # No trolls. Joke pages will be deleted.
    # Any pages that imply fetishes, pedophilia, or similar are LGBT+ will be deleted and the user will be banned.
    # Do not plagiarize. You can paraphrase or quote sources if you can't find a better way to put the information, but try to put things in your own words or add something to it.
    #We do not do any pages that are [specific person]sexual. Any pages like this will be deleted.
    #We try to limit pages that are [specific character]gender, if the definition is just "a connection to [specific character]". Unless the definition is more complex then that the page will likely be deleted.


    ==Sections==
    ==General Rules==
    *Articles cannot promote hate speech. This includes anything that promotes TERF, truscum, or exclusionist ideology or anything that implies that these ideologies are legitimate. Making such articles can result in an indefinite ban.
    These sections are most common sections found in an article. Articles can have any or all of these sections. Sections can sometimes be combined if they're short.
    *Vandalism of pages is not allowed in any form.
    *No pages that imply paraphilic disorders are LGBTQ+.
    *Do not make pages to promote accounts/discord servers/other websites, etc.
    *Absolutely no "joke pages/edits" or "satire pages/edits". These pages/edits will be treated with the same severity as if it were serious, regardless of your intentions.
    *No pages for "identities" that were created with the purpose of passive-aggressively complaining about, or to give an excuse to hate, other identities.


    ===New Pages===
    To make this clear, do NOT put a pronoun section on gender pages. ANY gender can use ANY pronouns, so do not mention the "possible pronouns" for a gender.
    *You do not have to ask to make a page; you do not have to personally identify with a term to make a page for it (unless it's exclusive to a group you're not part of).
    *Terms cannot be coined via the creation of an article on this wiki.
    *New pages must have an acceptable resources section. This is to promote data integrity and avoid loss of work (example, all the FANDOM created articles that are now gone since FANDOM deleted them).
    *Do not directly copy/paste the definition of a term from somewhere else without checking if the grammar is correct and that it follows our style guide (eg: making sure it's in third person).
    *New pages must be added to their lowest applicable category. For example, a Cabingender would fall under the Buildinggender category, NOT the Xenogender category (because Buildinggender already falls under Xenogender).


    ===Definition (Intro):===
    ===Relevance===
    This wiki is for LGBT+ identities and terminology that is used by the LGBT+ community or is relevant to the existence of the LGBT+ community. All pages must be relevant to this. Additionally we have other rules on what is and is not within the intended scope of this wiki.
    The definition can be short, but try to write more than a single sentence. A short paragraph or two is preferable. Even if the orientation is easily explained try to write multiple sentences. If you're struggling to write more try explaining what this orientation is ''not'', talk about similar orientations, and why this orientation is different from similar ones. If you cannot write more than one or two sentences please use the article stub tag. The name of the article MUST be in the first sentence and must be bolded. Any alternate terms or spelled should also be in the first sentence and should also be bolded. Use full sentences. (Do not say ''"Diamoric: an orientation that..."'' you should say ''"Diamoric is an orientation that..."''.)


    *No pages about kinks, fetishes, BDSM terms, or sexual preferences are allowed outside of the [[imprisexual]] and [[Sexual Diversity|sexual diversity]] pages.
    ===Images:===
    *Alterhumans, systems/neurodivergent individuals, disabled individuals, furries, regressors, and POC are not inherently LGBT+ and we do not allow pages for specific subsets to these unless they are queer-related.
    *No pages for individuals, couples, or small groups. This wiki is for identities, terminology, and ''occasionally'' large or significant groups.
    *No pages for LGBT+ sub-groups based on ethnicity, nationality, religion, politic affiliation, or ideologies (eg. Israeli transgender, queer anarchism, etc).
    *No pages for: alternate spellings/names for terms (aside from, potentially, redirects), or flags/alternate flags or symbols.
    *No pages for individual pronoun sets (as opposed to pronoun-related terminology such as [[neopronouns]]). Any pages for terms that are just defined as someone who uses a given pronoun set, or pages that are just "a connection to [pronoun set]", will be deleted. No pages for subsets of (pronoun)gender aside from shegender, hegender, theygender, itgender, neogender and nounselfgender.
    *No pages for attractions to specific objects/concepts.


    ===Exclusive Identities===
    Please include a pride flag if applicable. High quality PNGs are preferred. The DeviantArt page [https://www.deviantart.com/pride-flags Pride-Flags] is a good source of many high quality pride flags. All images must be captioned. The main image should appear at the top of the page.
    *Do not coin identities exclusive to minority groups you don't belong to/have no experience of.
    *Do not make pages for exclusive identities which are exclusive to groups you're not part of.
    *Do not coin terms that explicitly exclude people of minority groups you don't belong to (and are not on the basis of gender or sexuality).
    *Do not edit pages that are exclusive to groups you're not part of (aside from minor grammatical edits/edits to make the page conform to the style guide).


    ===Info Box:===
    ===Terms And Individuals===
    Pages may be created for [specific movie/TV show/character]gender or [specific song/album]gender. However, pages may not be created for genders connected to any specified real-life individual(s), including any genders related to:
    *A band/singer/another type of artist.
    *Independent creators such as YouTubers, online "personas", and other "personas" that are directly tied to an individual creator (however characters in media such as videogames, TV shows, books, etc, are allowed as long as the connection is to the character, and not an individual portraying said character).
    *Genders related to the attributes of any individual, such as someone's voice or appearance, even if they are playing a character.
    Pages may not be created for identities that are [specified individual(s)][attraction type], regardless of whether said individual(s) are real or fictional.
    *Pages for ficto- orientations can only be created if they do not specify any particular individual(s) that one is attracted to. One may make a page for the exclusive/almost exclusive attraction to characters from [genre of media], (eg: anime characters), but one may not make a page for exclusive/almost exclusive attraction to characters from any given piece of media (eg: attraction to characters from [insert show] or [insert game]).
    Though one's gender can certainly be related to/influenced by real-life individuals, and one may only experience attracted to a specific individual/group of individuals, pages for these identities may not be created, as this would be inappropriate and disrespectful to said individual(s).


    ==Coiner Consent and Integrity==
    If (''and only if'') you are making an article for an [[Affinitive Orientations|affinitive orientation]], you may use the sexuality info box. Do not use this info box for anything else.


    ===Variations And Combinations===
    ===History:===
    *Pages for counterparts to/variations of existing terms (eg: -romantic, -tertiary, -girl, -flux, demi- variations/counterparts) and pages for combination identities will be held to the same standards in terms of their history sections and resources as any other identity. Counterparts/variations and combination terms may not be coined via the creation of an article.
    *Pages should not be created for counterparts to/variations of terms where the "original" term or it's counterpart/variation is exclusive to a group that the creator is not part of; pages should not be created for combination identities where one or more of the terms being combined are exclusive to a group that the creator is not part of.
    *It must be clear which term the counterpart/variation is based on, or, for combination identities, it must be clear which terms are being combined.
    *It will be at the discretion of a given coiner whether to separate variations/counterparts onto separate pages or not, though counterparts/variations should ideally be mentioned in the body of a term's article.
    *Pages for combinations of two terms may be created if significant or unique information is provided (i.e: the page cannot simply state that [combination term] is when one identifies with both [term 1] and [term 2]). Pages for three terms may be created if the three identities are thematically connected due to having the same prefix (eg: aroace agender).


    ====Crediting====
    Who coined this term? When and on what site did they do it? Is there any other interesting information about the origin of this term? ''Include sources.''
    *Credit must be provided wherever appropriate. All coiners involved in creating identities must be credited, including the coiner of the term that the variation/counterpart is based on or the coiner(s) of any identities that are being used to create a combination term. The coiner - if there is one - of the the variation/counterpart/combination term should also be credited.
    *One must have created the term that the counterpart/variation is based on, or both/all three terms being combined, and/or have received explicit permission from the coiner(s) of any terms that one did not coin oneself to create a variation/counterpart/combination identity using said term(s) (proof of permission must be provided via screenshots uploaded to a gallery or an archived link provided as a resource).


    The only exceptions to this are cases where there is no concern over coiners having their terms used without permission:
    In some cases only an approximate date can be found. For example, if the original poster deleted their Tumblr account you could find someone who reblogged the post shortly after it was originally posted and find the date there. In cases like this you should say the term was coined "on or before [date]".
    *If the terms are exceptionally well-known, old and/or common and there are no concerns over a coiner having their terms used without permission (eg: lesbian, non-binary, androgyne, neutrois, agender, greygender, demigirl, m-spec, bi, demiromantic, omnisexual, xenogender).
    *If a coiner has publicly stated that their terms may be used in this way (in which case one must provide a reference confirming as such).


    ===Terms Systems===
    ==== How to Find Dates on Tumblr Posts ====
    *Pages for systems of terms will be held to the same standards in terms of their history sections and resources as any other pages. Terms systems may not be coined via the creation of an article.
    [[File:Date example.png|thumb|220x220px|This is how it will look, the date is underlined in red.]]
    *Pages should not be created for systems of terms where the system or the terms within it are exclusive to a group that the creator is not a part of.
    Not all Tumblr themes readily show the date posted. In this case here is how to find the date. This definitely works for Chrome, I'm not sure if it would work the same for other browsers.
    ====Coiner Consent====
    Term systems cannot include terms that the creator of the system didn't also coin themselves, unless they have received explicit permission from the coiner of the term (evidence of which must be uploaded to a gallery at the bottom of the page or linked as a resource). This applies even if said terms would technically "fit" into the system by definition. This also applies to adding other coiners' term systems as "sub-systems" without consent, and anything similar.
    ====Page Separation====
    *Terms in a system must be listed on the main system page, and any pages for terms within a system should mention and link the main system page.
    *As long as all pages contain proper resourcing, history sections and crediting, and the terms are all unique, the creator of a system and its terms can decide whether to create separate pages for each term in their system, regardless of the number of terms in the system or how much information is contained in the terms' definitions (as long as it's more than "[term] is a term in the [term system]").
    *If on a separated page, further variations or subsets of a term in a system (eg, terms where the definition is just that it is a -flux, -girl, -demi, etc, version of the term) should ideally be kept on the same page as said term rather than separated onto another page, unless said variations/subsets contain a significant amount of different/unique information, in which case they may be separated. This is, however, largely up to the discretion of the coiner.
    ====Other Coiners' Systems====
    *One may not coin terms or create "sub-systems" and add them under other coiners' term systems without consent, unless there are no concerns over coiners having terms added to their systems without permission, such as if a coiner has publicly stated that their terms may be used in this way (in which case a reference confirming as such should be present on the main page for the term system).
    *If a term is added to a system without explicit coiner consent, terms should still "make sense" within, and be appropriate additions to, that system.


    ===Recoining===
    # Right click the page and click "Inspect". OR press Ctrl+Shift+I.
    *Do not edit pages in a way that (fundamentally or otherwise) changes the definition of a term unless you are the coiner, or are doing so with permission from the coiner. This includes: adding additional aspects to the term that wasn't intended in the coining, removing information regarding the term's definition, completely changing the definition, etc. This will be taken very seriously.
    # With the inspect window open press Ctrl+F.
    *Do not "coin" terms with the same name as a term that has already been coined, regardless of whether said term has a page on the wiki. This especially applies to terms being "coined" after November 10th, 2021, and it applies regardless of where the term was "coined". For example, do not make a page for a term someone coined on Tumblr two days ago, if a term by that same name was actually originally coined six months ago.
    # Type "date".
    *Do not make a page for an identity where the definition is identical to that of a pre-existing term, unless there is a significant reason for doing so.
    # Either the first or second instance of the word "date" should be "datePublished". Next to that you will find the date you want. It's in year-month-day format. See the above picture to see what to look for.
    *Do not rename pages or change the primary name used in a page, unless: you are the creator of the term, the community has ''widely'' agreed on the new name, the name is incorrect/spelled wrong, or you are otherwise making it compliant with the [[LGBTA+_Wiki:Style Guide|style guide]].
    *You may add alternate names for terms, however, this should only be done with coiner consent if possible, and if a coiner does not want alternate names created for their terms, this should be respected.
    ===Archiving Recoinings And Independent Coinings===
    *Any coiner should reserve the right to have recoined information/secondary definitions removed from their terms' pages.
    *To emphasize, alternate definitions and recoinings should never be created intentionally, and will not be accepted in any form if added/coined after November 10th, 2021 - any information that wasn't present at the original coining should only be recorded if necessary for the sake of archiving and preserving a term's history and/or at the request of a term's coiner.
    *For terms that were independently coined by multiple users before November 10th, 2021, it may be possible to include said multiple definitions on a page, however, the different definitions must be clearly separated and individually credited, rather than combined in any way.
    *A term should be archived with its original intended definition, aside from in exceptional circumstances where additional information is very significant, in which case information added via recoinings may potentially be included on a page. However, there must be a clear distinction made between the original definition and any recoined information, and this should only ever be included if it is significant to the evolution of/the widely-accepted understanding of a term.
    *The first/original coining of a term should always be listed first in an article if possible, unless another definition is widely accepted as the definition of the term, or the definition has evolved over time to a point where it would make much more sense to list it as the first definition on the page (though this should be avoided except in exceptional circumstances), in which case the original definition should still be clearly stated and credited on the page as the original coining).


    ===Flag:===
    ==Editing==
    *You do not need to ask to edit a page; you do not need to have created a page to edit it; and you do not need to personally identify with a term to edit its page (as long as the term is not exclusive to a group you are not part of and you are making edits in accordance with the guidelines).
    *Do not repeatedly remake a page that has been deleted without consulting moderators to know why it was deleted.
    *Do not participate in "edit warring"- repeatedly creating/adding/changing content that is unnecessary, unproductive, or goes against the [[LGBTA+_Wiki:Style Guide|style guide]] or article guidelines.
    *Do not remove major amounts of information or content that you did not write. Only remove things that go against the the [[LGBTA+_Wiki:Style Guide|style guide]]. Even if information is outdated, it is still relevant and should be put in the history section. If you feel like an article in its current form is inaccurate, contact a moderator before making major changes.
    *Do not add random "comments" on a page; please utilise the page's comments section (eg: do not add, "wow, I can edit this", or "this is valid").


    === Flags ===
    Who designed the flag and when? What is the meaning of the colors? For the creator and creation date sources are required. For the color meanings sources are not required but are recommended.
    * Do not remove existing flags from a page unless you are the creator of the flag or are doing so with permission from the creator.
    * Do not change which flag is at the top of the page unless the community has widely accepted it as the new flag.
    * If a page states that the coiner does not want others to create alternate flags for their terms, respect this request.


    ===Acceptable Edits===
    If the history sections and the flags sections are both relatively short you can combine them into one section.
    *Fixing minor spelling/grammar mistakes; adjusting presentation and formatting; adding (appropriate) captions to images that don't have a caption; and adjusting minor instances of language use (as long as these edits do not in any way alter the definition of a term) so that the article is compliant with the [[LGBTA+_Wiki:Style Guide|style guide]].
    * Adding flags or alternate flags if you find one/make one (as long as the coiner consents to this and the term is not exclusive to a group you are not part of).
    * Ensuring that the information in articles is correct (aligned with the original coining of a term) and adjusting text accordingly.
    * Adding information to a page left that the original coiner has given, or changing something at the coiner’s request.
    * Removing recoinings and information that was not present in the term's original definition (make sure you report instances of recoining to a moderator).
    * [[Rollback Guide|Rolling back any vandalism]] (make sure to report instances of vandalism to a moderator), if you know how to do so (please do not attempt to perform rollbacks if you do not fully understand how to do so correctly).


    ==Allowed With Restrictions==
    === Etymology: ===
    Some pages that are allowed, but have certain guidelines regarding them.
    Is this term derived from another word? Does this term use roots from another language? This section can be as short as a single sentence. 


    *The "beware", "bigoted groups", and "exclusionist groups" categories are strictly for terms that ''exist'' and are used. Do not attempt to "create" new identities specifically to go in this category or create names for "new" groups.
    ===Resources:===
    *We DO allow pages for identities that are reclaimed slurs. However, the page must firstly and primarily focus on it's usage as an identity. The usage as a slur should be mentioned but should not be the main focus of the article.


    ==Redirects==
    Obviously, sources are good to have, but are not necessary as it can sometimes be hard to find things like the first recorded use of a term, especially for more obscure terms. If you do include sources please make sure your links are up to date.
    Redirect pages should only be created:

    *Possibly for alternate spellings/names for a term, if both said term being redirected to is common and multiple spellings/names for the term are ''commonly'' used.
    === Categories ===
    *Possibly for popular pages that have moved (not if the page was moved due to a grammatical error).
    All articles must have at least one relevant category. Some categories have subcategories. If you use a subcategory it must also be tagged with the parent category. (See [[Formatting Guidelines|here]] for the categories used.)
    *Possibly if many links already exist to this page and it would be hard to change all of them to the main page.

    ==Formatting==
    Try to keep the formatting and spelling the same as already completed pages. The [[diamoric]] page and the [[agender]] are good examples of how a page should be formatted. Also read the [[Formatting Guidelines|formatting guidelines]] for more details.

    === Do ===

    * DO bold the title of the article (it should be the first word in the first sentence).
    * DO add links to the first instance of a different topic mentioned in the article.
    * DO use formal writing. Capitalize the beginning of each sentence and proper nouns.
    * DO put a period at the end of sentences.
    * DO use the word "one" when talking about a hypothetical person.
    * DO add categories.

    === Do Not ===

    * Do NOT bold anything other than the title of the article.
    * Do NOT ink to pages outside of this wiki, instead use references.
    * Do NOT capitalize random words (Names of genders and sexualities are ''not'' proper nouns).
    * Do NOT use exclamation points.
    * Do NOT use words like "you".
    * Do NOT write things in the first person.
    * Do NOT create new categories without asking.

    == Language Use ==

    *American English spelling should be used unless it's in a direct quote.
    * The months in all dates should be spelled out. Do not use abbreviations.
    * The word non-binary should be spelled with a dash. (The exception is when the word is part of a larger word such as deminonbinary.)
    * Do not say "NB" or "enby". Say "non-binary".
    * Do not say "enbys" or "non-binarys". Say "non-binary people".
    * Do not say "transmen"/"transwomen" or "trans-men"/"trans-women". Say "trans men"/"trans women".
    * When talking about identities, especially genders, avoid using doubtful language such as "they ''believe ''they are..." or "they ''identify'' as...". Instead use terms like "they are..." or "their identity is..."
    * Don't misgender people when talking about them in history section. If the term was coined on Tumblr or DeviantArt the creator might have their pronouns on their profile. If they don't have their pronouns listed or it's unclear which pronouns to use it's recommended to simply refer to them by their user name.
    * Do not use "he or she" or "s/he" or anything similar.
    * Words in other languages should be italicized. Their translation should be in quotes. For example: "Diamoric comes from the Greek prefix ''dia-'' meaning "passing through" and the Latin word ''amor'', meaning "love"."
    * If a Tumblr blog is run by a single person the first letter of the username should be capitalized like a proper name. If the username has a dash in it the first letter of each word should be capitalized. If the Tumblr blog is run by multiple people is can be capitalized but does not have to be.
    *All website names should capitalized.
    * For sexualities the title should always be the adjective form of the word. (As in, the title is "asexual", not "asexuality".)
    *For page titles with multiple words all words should be capitalized.

    == What Should Be In A Page ==
    When writing you should assume that the person reading your page has little to no knowledge of this term, the LGBT+ community, and internal LGBT+ politics. Explain your topic from the ground up, do not use overly complex and specific terminology unless it's necessary.

    Present your article objectively. You should objectively describe what the term is, who identifies with it, and why. Do not bring up "discourse" or similar things in the article unless that discourse is important to the formation of term as we know it (such as the case with [[allosexual]]) in which case put it in the 'history' section.

    === Prescriptive vs Descriptive Definitions ===
    Prescriptive definitions of terms focus on what a term "actually means" or how it "should" be used. Descriptive definitions, on the other hand, focus on describing how to term is used in practice. For example, a prescriptive definition of bisexuality would say that bi- means two, and therefore bisexuality is the attraction to two genders only, no more and no less. A descriptive definition of bisexuality would see that, while some bisexuals are only attracted to two genders, the general view of gender has changed greatly in the past few decades; many bisexuals are attracted to non-binary people, so bisexuality could be described as the attraction to two ''or more'' genders.

    On this wiki we should try to strike a balance between prescriptive and descriptive definitions. You should open your article by talking about the most widely used definition of a term. The majority of your article should focus of this most commonly used definition. Whether that usage of the term is prescriptive or descriptive doesn't matter.

    To bring up the prescriptive definition of a term you could say something like ''"Traditionally this term means [prescriptive definition] however, in modern times many people define it as [descriptive definition]"''. To bring up the descriptive definition of a term you should bring up how other people might use the term that doesn't completely fit the most strict definition of the term. As an example from the [[agender]] page: ''"While some agender individuals completely lack gender, some may call themselves agender their gender is neutral or neutrois, or their gender is unknown or undefinable..." ''These alternate definitions should should only be a minor part of the article, the majority of the article should focus on how ''most'' people use the term.

    Do not say that people using a term in a certain way are using it "wrong". Unless the creator has explicitly stated that the term was not intended to be used in such a way. Unless this alternate definition is genuinely wrong and reinforces negative stereotypes about the group in question there is no "wrong" way to use an identity.


    [[Category:Info]]
    [[Category:Info]]

    Latest revision as of 21:19, 12 October 2023

    All articles and edits must follow WikiTide's content policy as well as the style guide for this wiki.

    You are responsible for making sure your page meets the standards listed here and in the style guide. If minor aspects are wrong, it can be edited, but if major sections are wrong or missing, or the page is incomprehensible, then it will be deleted.

    General Rules

    • Articles cannot promote hate speech. This includes anything that promotes TERF, truscum, or exclusionist ideology or anything that implies that these ideologies are legitimate. Making such articles can result in an indefinite ban.
    • Vandalism of pages is not allowed in any form.
    • No pages that imply paraphilic disorders are LGBTQ+.
    • Do not make pages to promote accounts/discord servers/other websites, etc.
    • Absolutely no "joke pages/edits" or "satire pages/edits". These pages/edits will be treated with the same severity as if it were serious, regardless of your intentions.
    • No pages for "identities" that were created with the purpose of passive-aggressively complaining about, or to give an excuse to hate, other identities.

    New Pages

    • You do not have to ask to make a page; you do not have to personally identify with a term to make a page for it (unless it's exclusive to a group you're not part of).
    • Terms cannot be coined via the creation of an article on this wiki.
    • New pages must have an acceptable resources section. This is to promote data integrity and avoid loss of work (example, all the FANDOM created articles that are now gone since FANDOM deleted them).
    • Do not directly copy/paste the definition of a term from somewhere else without checking if the grammar is correct and that it follows our style guide (eg: making sure it's in third person).
    • New pages must be added to their lowest applicable category. For example, a Cabingender would fall under the Buildinggender category, NOT the Xenogender category (because Buildinggender already falls under Xenogender).

    Relevance

    This wiki is for LGBT+ identities and terminology that is used by the LGBT+ community or is relevant to the existence of the LGBT+ community. All pages must be relevant to this. Additionally we have other rules on what is and is not within the intended scope of this wiki.

    • No pages about kinks, fetishes, BDSM terms, or sexual preferences are allowed outside of the imprisexual and sexual diversity pages.
    • Alterhumans, systems/neurodivergent individuals, disabled individuals, furries, regressors, and POC are not inherently LGBT+ and we do not allow pages for specific subsets to these unless they are queer-related.
    • No pages for individuals, couples, or small groups. This wiki is for identities, terminology, and occasionally large or significant groups.
    • No pages for LGBT+ sub-groups based on ethnicity, nationality, religion, politic affiliation, or ideologies (eg. Israeli transgender, queer anarchism, etc).
    • No pages for: alternate spellings/names for terms (aside from, potentially, redirects), or flags/alternate flags or symbols.
    • No pages for individual pronoun sets (as opposed to pronoun-related terminology such as neopronouns). Any pages for terms that are just defined as someone who uses a given pronoun set, or pages that are just "a connection to [pronoun set]", will be deleted. No pages for subsets of (pronoun)gender aside from shegender, hegender, theygender, itgender, neogender and nounselfgender.
    • No pages for attractions to specific objects/concepts.

    Exclusive Identities

    • Do not coin identities exclusive to minority groups you don't belong to/have no experience of.
    • Do not make pages for exclusive identities which are exclusive to groups you're not part of.
    • Do not coin terms that explicitly exclude people of minority groups you don't belong to (and are not on the basis of gender or sexuality).
    • Do not edit pages that are exclusive to groups you're not part of (aside from minor grammatical edits/edits to make the page conform to the style guide).

    Terms And Individuals

    Pages may be created for [specific movie/TV show/character]gender or [specific song/album]gender. However, pages may not be created for genders connected to any specified real-life individual(s), including any genders related to:

    • A band/singer/another type of artist.
    • Independent creators such as YouTubers, online "personas", and other "personas" that are directly tied to an individual creator (however characters in media such as videogames, TV shows, books, etc, are allowed as long as the connection is to the character, and not an individual portraying said character).
    • Genders related to the attributes of any individual, such as someone's voice or appearance, even if they are playing a character.

    Pages may not be created for identities that are [specified individual(s)][attraction type], regardless of whether said individual(s) are real or fictional.

    • Pages for ficto- orientations can only be created if they do not specify any particular individual(s) that one is attracted to. One may make a page for the exclusive/almost exclusive attraction to characters from [genre of media], (eg: anime characters), but one may not make a page for exclusive/almost exclusive attraction to characters from any given piece of media (eg: attraction to characters from [insert show] or [insert game]).

    Though one's gender can certainly be related to/influenced by real-life individuals, and one may only experience attracted to a specific individual/group of individuals, pages for these identities may not be created, as this would be inappropriate and disrespectful to said individual(s).

    Coiner Consent and Integrity

    Variations And Combinations

    • Pages for counterparts to/variations of existing terms (eg: -romantic, -tertiary, -girl, -flux, demi- variations/counterparts) and pages for combination identities will be held to the same standards in terms of their history sections and resources as any other identity. Counterparts/variations and combination terms may not be coined via the creation of an article.
    • Pages should not be created for counterparts to/variations of terms where the "original" term or it's counterpart/variation is exclusive to a group that the creator is not part of; pages should not be created for combination identities where one or more of the terms being combined are exclusive to a group that the creator is not part of.
    • It must be clear which term the counterpart/variation is based on, or, for combination identities, it must be clear which terms are being combined.
    • It will be at the discretion of a given coiner whether to separate variations/counterparts onto separate pages or not, though counterparts/variations should ideally be mentioned in the body of a term's article.
    • Pages for combinations of two terms may be created if significant or unique information is provided (i.e: the page cannot simply state that [combination term] is when one identifies with both [term 1] and [term 2]). Pages for three terms may be created if the three identities are thematically connected due to having the same prefix (eg: aroace agender).

    Crediting

    • Credit must be provided wherever appropriate. All coiners involved in creating identities must be credited, including the coiner of the term that the variation/counterpart is based on or the coiner(s) of any identities that are being used to create a combination term. The coiner - if there is one - of the the variation/counterpart/combination term should also be credited.
    • One must have created the term that the counterpart/variation is based on, or both/all three terms being combined, and/or have received explicit permission from the coiner(s) of any terms that one did not coin oneself to create a variation/counterpart/combination identity using said term(s) (proof of permission must be provided via screenshots uploaded to a gallery or an archived link provided as a resource).

    The only exceptions to this are cases where there is no concern over coiners having their terms used without permission:

    • If the terms are exceptionally well-known, old and/or common and there are no concerns over a coiner having their terms used without permission (eg: lesbian, non-binary, androgyne, neutrois, agender, greygender, demigirl, m-spec, bi, demiromantic, omnisexual, xenogender).
    • If a coiner has publicly stated that their terms may be used in this way (in which case one must provide a reference confirming as such).

    Terms Systems

    • Pages for systems of terms will be held to the same standards in terms of their history sections and resources as any other pages. Terms systems may not be coined via the creation of an article.
    • Pages should not be created for systems of terms where the system or the terms within it are exclusive to a group that the creator is not a part of.

    Coiner Consent

    Term systems cannot include terms that the creator of the system didn't also coin themselves, unless they have received explicit permission from the coiner of the term (evidence of which must be uploaded to a gallery at the bottom of the page or linked as a resource). This applies even if said terms would technically "fit" into the system by definition. This also applies to adding other coiners' term systems as "sub-systems" without consent, and anything similar.

    Page Separation

    • Terms in a system must be listed on the main system page, and any pages for terms within a system should mention and link the main system page.
    • As long as all pages contain proper resourcing, history sections and crediting, and the terms are all unique, the creator of a system and its terms can decide whether to create separate pages for each term in their system, regardless of the number of terms in the system or how much information is contained in the terms' definitions (as long as it's more than "[term] is a term in the [term system]").
    • If on a separated page, further variations or subsets of a term in a system (eg, terms where the definition is just that it is a -flux, -girl, -demi, etc, version of the term) should ideally be kept on the same page as said term rather than separated onto another page, unless said variations/subsets contain a significant amount of different/unique information, in which case they may be separated. This is, however, largely up to the discretion of the coiner.

    Other Coiners' Systems

    • One may not coin terms or create "sub-systems" and add them under other coiners' term systems without consent, unless there are no concerns over coiners having terms added to their systems without permission, such as if a coiner has publicly stated that their terms may be used in this way (in which case a reference confirming as such should be present on the main page for the term system).
    • If a term is added to a system without explicit coiner consent, terms should still "make sense" within, and be appropriate additions to, that system.

    Recoining

    • Do not edit pages in a way that (fundamentally or otherwise) changes the definition of a term unless you are the coiner, or are doing so with permission from the coiner. This includes: adding additional aspects to the term that wasn't intended in the coining, removing information regarding the term's definition, completely changing the definition, etc. This will be taken very seriously.
    • Do not "coin" terms with the same name as a term that has already been coined, regardless of whether said term has a page on the wiki. This especially applies to terms being "coined" after November 10th, 2021, and it applies regardless of where the term was "coined". For example, do not make a page for a term someone coined on Tumblr two days ago, if a term by that same name was actually originally coined six months ago.
    • Do not make a page for an identity where the definition is identical to that of a pre-existing term, unless there is a significant reason for doing so.
    • Do not rename pages or change the primary name used in a page, unless: you are the creator of the term, the community has widely agreed on the new name, the name is incorrect/spelled wrong, or you are otherwise making it compliant with the style guide.
    • You may add alternate names for terms, however, this should only be done with coiner consent if possible, and if a coiner does not want alternate names created for their terms, this should be respected.

    Archiving Recoinings And Independent Coinings

    • Any coiner should reserve the right to have recoined information/secondary definitions removed from their terms' pages.
    • To emphasize, alternate definitions and recoinings should never be created intentionally, and will not be accepted in any form if added/coined after November 10th, 2021 - any information that wasn't present at the original coining should only be recorded if necessary for the sake of archiving and preserving a term's history and/or at the request of a term's coiner.
    • For terms that were independently coined by multiple users before November 10th, 2021, it may be possible to include said multiple definitions on a page, however, the different definitions must be clearly separated and individually credited, rather than combined in any way.
    • A term should be archived with its original intended definition, aside from in exceptional circumstances where additional information is very significant, in which case information added via recoinings may potentially be included on a page. However, there must be a clear distinction made between the original definition and any recoined information, and this should only ever be included if it is significant to the evolution of/the widely-accepted understanding of a term.
    • The first/original coining of a term should always be listed first in an article if possible, unless another definition is widely accepted as the definition of the term, or the definition has evolved over time to a point where it would make much more sense to list it as the first definition on the page (though this should be avoided except in exceptional circumstances), in which case the original definition should still be clearly stated and credited on the page as the original coining).

    Editing

    • You do not need to ask to edit a page; you do not need to have created a page to edit it; and you do not need to personally identify with a term to edit its page (as long as the term is not exclusive to a group you are not part of and you are making edits in accordance with the guidelines).
    • Do not repeatedly remake a page that has been deleted without consulting moderators to know why it was deleted.
    • Do not participate in "edit warring"- repeatedly creating/adding/changing content that is unnecessary, unproductive, or goes against the style guide or article guidelines.
    • Do not remove major amounts of information or content that you did not write. Only remove things that go against the the style guide. Even if information is outdated, it is still relevant and should be put in the history section. If you feel like an article in its current form is inaccurate, contact a moderator before making major changes.
    • Do not add random "comments" on a page; please utilise the page's comments section (eg: do not add, "wow, I can edit this", or "this is valid").

    Flags

    • Do not remove existing flags from a page unless you are the creator of the flag or are doing so with permission from the creator.
    • Do not change which flag is at the top of the page unless the community has widely accepted it as the new flag.
    • If a page states that the coiner does not want others to create alternate flags for their terms, respect this request.

    Acceptable Edits

    • Fixing minor spelling/grammar mistakes; adjusting presentation and formatting; adding (appropriate) captions to images that don't have a caption; and adjusting minor instances of language use (as long as these edits do not in any way alter the definition of a term) so that the article is compliant with the style guide.
    • Adding flags or alternate flags if you find one/make one (as long as the coiner consents to this and the term is not exclusive to a group you are not part of).
    • Ensuring that the information in articles is correct (aligned with the original coining of a term) and adjusting text accordingly.
    • Adding information to a page left that the original coiner has given, or changing something at the coiner’s request.
    • Removing recoinings and information that was not present in the term's original definition (make sure you report instances of recoining to a moderator).
    • Rolling back any vandalism (make sure to report instances of vandalism to a moderator), if you know how to do so (please do not attempt to perform rollbacks if you do not fully understand how to do so correctly).

    Allowed With Restrictions

    Some pages that are allowed, but have certain guidelines regarding them.

    • The "beware", "bigoted groups", and "exclusionist groups" categories are strictly for terms that exist and are used. Do not attempt to "create" new identities specifically to go in this category or create names for "new" groups.
    • We DO allow pages for identities that are reclaimed slurs. However, the page must firstly and primarily focus on it's usage as an identity. The usage as a slur should be mentioned but should not be the main focus of the article.

    Redirects

    Redirect pages should only be created:

    • Possibly for alternate spellings/names for a term, if both said term being redirected to is common and multiple spellings/names for the term are commonly used.
    • Possibly for popular pages that have moved (not if the page was moved due to a grammatical error).
    • Possibly if many links already exist to this page and it would be hard to change all of them to the main page.
    Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies.
    Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies.