Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Feb 18, 2023 · Some call cisgender a slur — as in, “Im not cis, I’m normal.” What should be an innocuous term has spawned Twitter storms from celebrities like William Shatner who said he feels debased and hated by the use of the term.

  2. People also ask

  3. The term cisgender has its origin in the Latin-derived prefix cis-, meaning 'on this side of', which is the opposite of trans-, meaning 'across from' or 'on the other side of'.

  4. Dana Defosse is credited with coining the term “cisgender” in 1994. The term describes people whose gender identity matches the gender they were assigned at birth. It’s the counterpart to transgender, which describes those whose gender identity differs from their assigned gender.

    • Ian Helms
  5. www.historians.org · perspectives-article · tracingTracing Terminology - AHA

    Jan 19, 2024 · “Cisgender (adj.): Designating a person whose sense of personal identity and gender corresponds to his or her sex at birth; of or relating to such persons. Contrasted with transgender.” – Oxford English Dictionary.

  6. Aug 3, 2018 · Cissexual was coined in the mid 1990s by a German sexologist. He used the Latin preposition cis, meaning “on this side of,” as a contrast to transsexual, trans being the Latin for “on the other side of” or “across.”

  7. Jun 19, 2017 · Specifically, those things are the words “cisgender” and its Latin root, “cis,” which in practical use is intended as shorthand for, “not transgender.”

  8. Cisgender (often shortened to cis) describes someone whose gender identity matches the sex they had or were identified as having at birth. Most people can be described as cisgender. If the pronouncement your mom heard at your birth—It's a girl! or It's a boy!—still feels like it was accurate, then you're cisgender.

  1. People also search for