Contionary:jero: Difference between revisions
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Jukethatbox (talk | contribs) Created page with "{{gnym-n|head={{head|gnym|n|g=cII|plural|jerosi|diminutive|jerito}}|meaning={{label|gnym|LGBT|neologism}} gender, one's gender identity #: {{syn|gnym|insía|jenda}}|pron=ˈxero|ety=From {{der|gnym|es|género}}, coined by LGBT activists around 2232 along with {{l|gnym|insía}} to replace negatively-connotated {{l|gnym|jenda}}, a term which it has mostly displaced in most casual contexts and in the LGBTQ community of Ganymede. See {{l|gnym|jenda}} for a more thorough etymo..." |
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{{gnym-n|head={{head|gnym|n|g=cII|plural|jerosi|diminutive|jerito}}|meaning={{label|gnym|LGBT|neologism}} gender, one's gender identity | {{gnym-n|head={{head|gnym|n|g=cII|plural|jerosi|diminutive|jerito}}|meaning={{label|gnym|LGBT|neologism}} gender, one's gender identity | ||
#: {{syn|gnym|insía|jenda}}|pron=ˈxero|ety=From {{der|gnym|es|género}}, coined by LGBT activists around 2232 along with {{l|gnym|insía}} to replace negatively-connotated {{l|gnym|jenda}}, a term which it has mostly displaced in most casual contexts and in the LGBTQ community of Ganymede. See {{l|gnym|jenda}} for a more thorough etymological history of the emergence of ''{{term|jero}}'' and {{l|gnym|insía}}.|example=Mi likomenso '''jero''' mi wando mi ten 5 añosi.|translation=I started to question my '''gender [identity]''' when I was 5 years old.}} | #: {{syn|gnym|insía|jenda}}|pron=ˈxero|ety=From {{der|gnym|es|género}}, coined by LGBT activists around 2232 along with {{l|gnym|insía}} to replace negatively-connotated {{l|gnym|jenda}}, a term which it has mostly displaced in most casual contexts and in the LGBTQ community of Ganymede. See {{l|gnym|jenda}} for a more thorough etymological history of the emergence of ''{{term|jero}}'' and {{l|gnym|insía}}.|example=Mi likomenso kupunta '''jero''' mi wando mi ten 5 añosi.|translation=I started to question my '''gender [identity]''' when I was 5 years old.}} | ||
Latest revision as of 09:53, 29 May 2026
Ganymedian
Etymology
From Spanish género, coined by LGBT activists around 2232 along with insía to replace negatively-connotated jenda, a term which it has mostly displaced in most casual contexts and in the LGBTQ community of Ganymede. See jenda for a more thorough etymological history of the emergence of jero and insía.