Quote from: Ken/Kendra on September 29, 2007, 09:07:02 AM
Is there any other source of dictionary that I am missing?
The examples you dug up are, I think, enough to show that general dictionaries are not particularly useful here: their emphasis is on everyday speech, not specialised jargon, and frankly neither the general public nor the average lexicographer has reason to seriously question the traditional two-gender system.
Quote from: no_id on September 28, 2007, 06:38:01 AM
is Androgyne an Umbrella-term or truly a gender identification
Yes.

That is, it is entirely reasonable to divide the gender landscape to two, three, four, five or even more regions.
Androgyne is somewhere between
male and
female; in a three-way split, these are all, so the identities that are not at either of the absolute ends have to be considered as some variants of one of the three. Mostly they fall under
androgyne, but in a trinary gender system it's also reasonable to consider some of us as shades of
male or
female. For instance, depending on just how one understands
gender, I could see my own identity labelled as either androgyne or trinary female.
The point here is that the
androgyne of a three-gender system is not just a superset of the
bigender,
ambigender and
null-gender of a five-gender system. This is not a strict hierarchy: when adding genders, the borders of the old ones change as well. Still, it's a reasonably close approximation to use the trinary
androgyne as an umbrella term for the genders that contrast with
male] and
female in any non-binary system. We might as well do that, but with the realisation that we want to include people who may not feel very close to the 'core' of androgyny.
Quote
what is the 'true' definition of Androgyne if placed under the Gender Variant umbrella?
Trying to express Emerald's definition in the terms I used above,
androgyne can be seen as one of the genders in a four-way system, contrasting with
male,
female and
bigender. I, personally, would restrict its use to the three-gender system and use the five-gender system outlined above when appropriate.
Nfr