Proctopeo wrote:Auzkhia wrote:I only heard of Juxera from this quiz but apparently it's been around since July 2014 when tumblr user Wulfgendur coined it and proxvir. I also like using transfemme too. My specific genders are demigirl and androgyne.
Not to be stereotypical or anything, but such constructions coming from Tumblr is as expected. Doubly expected is the user coming up with it having a name that's only slightly less stupid.
I know I know. I mean, I learned demiboy and demigirl from tumblr back in 2017, I looked through and followed so many trans/nb blogs. I stopped using when they banned the porn, NSFW tumblr was the best facet of it. However, I have trans twitter and and trans/nb subreddits to follow.
Khasinkonia wrote:Auzkhia wrote:Out of all the whole internet gender quizzes,
this one is the best. This quiz gives you many labels and shows you how accurate each label may be based on a ranking system.
I usually get Juxera, but I'm tied with bigender and demigirl/demifemale, genderfluid and androgyne are also high up the list two.
Juxera is a feminine gender that is uniquely non-binary. Proxvir is the masculine version.
As expected, I got trans woman(Of course, I already was quite aware of that but you know.) or transfeminine. Personally, I never ever use transfeminine to describe myself. I’m a woman, plain and simple, no hunky-dory needed. It may be a useful label for others, but I’ve scarcely ever felt even a speck nonbinary.
Transfeminine is generally a term to describe all trans people that were assigned male. It generally means trans women and most AMAB nonbinary people. However, you don't have to feminine or masculine to be nonbinary. I describe myself as transfemme, and never like to call myself a woman. I don't claim that label, except maybe politically, but even that's me being facetious.
Cekoviu wrote:Liriena wrote:I was about to click "man (cis)" in the poll, but then I remembered how often I think and talk about my gender in kind of ambivalent terms, acknowledging that I'm a man while also feeling like I don't really care about being a man but also not actively wanting to be a woman... so I'm temptatively voting "other".
I think that's how a good number of cis people seem to perceive themselves, too.
I had similar thoughts as an egg and when I was questioning, trying on labels and people calling me they or them, really helped me.