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| colspan="2" |is in direct opposition to, or unaffiliated with the associated term
|[[Antigender]]
|-
| -comfic
|gender that relates to one's object or concept of comfort
|N/A
|
|-
| -coric
|gender centred around a core aesthetic or concept
|N/A
|[[Arcadecoric]]
|-
| -curious / -unsure
| colspan="2" |an identity that an individual is questioning relevance to oneself
|[[Abrocurious]]
|-
| -fluid
| colspan="2" |fluctuates between some or many identities of various genders/orientations
|[[Genderfluid]]
|-
| -flux
| colspan="2" |identity fluctuates in intensity but generally adheres to a single gender/orientation spectrum
|[[Genderflux]]
|-
| -jump
| colspan="2" |experiences brief and intense jumps to the specified term
|[[Ace-jump|Acejump]]
|-
| -near / -ish
| colspan="2" |an identity closely fitting to a term but not completely
|[[Boyish]]
|-
| -spec
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|[[Genderspike]]
|}
=== Common Misconceptions ===
'''-fluid vs -flux:''' -fluid individuals may fluctuate between varying different identities, including ones that may be the complete opposite of another ([[finsexual]] and [[minsexual]]). Whereas -flux only fluctuates in base intensity (such as [[greyasexual]], or [[asexual]]).
'''-jump vs -spike:''' -spike indicates that the paired term is the normally adhered to identity, where as -jump indicates that the paired term is the identity one may occasionally jump to. For example, an [[acespike]] is usually asexual, whereas an [[Ace-jump|acejump]] is usually ''not'' asexual.
==Resources==
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