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Which does the gender identity spectrum include? Select three options. cisgender people only two genders only a single gender people who identify as neither male nor female people who identify as both male and female

User Yong Wang
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2 Answers

5 votes

Answer:

(A) Cisgender people

(D) People who identify as neither male or female

(E) People who identify as both male and female

Step-by-step explanation:

If this is confusing for you I will explain. Gender norms for most of the world consist of two binary genders of male and female. Just because these are the norms it does not mean these are the only two gender identities. Think of gender as a spectrum. 1 being female and 10 being male. Anyone can fall anywhere on that spectrum, and even not on it at all. You could be l, 10, or any number in between. You could be multiple of those numbers at once. Sometimes you could be one, sometimes 10, and any other number or placement at any other time. You could not be on that spectrum altogether. There are different names depending on where you are on that spectrum. If you are at one and were born afab (assigned female at birth), you would be a cisgender female. If you are at one and were born amab (assigned male at birth), you are a transgender female. If you are at 10 and were born amab, you are a cisgender male, and if you are at 10 and were born afab, you are a transgender male. If you don't fit either you could be a number of different things. If you feel like your gender identity is non-binary that could mean you feel neither male or female ever. If you are genderfluid your gender identity can change between different genders at any given time. For some people who are genderfluid they switch between a certain number of genders, and for other genderfluid people they may switch between all different gender identities. Another gender identity is agender. When you are agender you feel like you don't have a gender. Then you would not fall on the spectrum at all, but somewhere else. Some others are demigirl/demiboy, where you feel partially attached to a binary gender but not fully. There are many, many more gender identities and all are valid. Pronouns someone uses are completely up to what they are comfortable with. Also keep in mind that gender identity has nothing to do with gender expression, and also that not everyone may feel comfortable taking hormone blockers, hormones, or with surgeries. This is also completely up to them.

User Walt Stoneburner
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6 votes

Answer:

Cisgender people, People who identify as neither male nor female, People who identify as both male and female.

User Xilexio
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