English edit

Etymology edit

cis- +‎ queer

Adjective edit

cisqueer (comparative more cisqueer, superlative most cisqueer)

  1. Cisgender and queer.
    • 2015, Rebecca Huff, "Gender identity at Miami", The Miami Student (Miami University, Oxford, OH), page 3:
      Nelson identifies as a cisqueer female and uses the Preferred Gender Pronouns (PGP) they, them and theirs.
    • 2018, Anastasia M. Collins, "Language, Power, and Oppression in the LIS Diversity Void", Library Trends, Volume 67, Number 1, Summer 2018, page 51:
      Anastasia M. Collins is a cisqueer mixed woman of color and the research and instruction librarian for children’s literature and social work at Simmons College, []
    • 2019, Tiffany DeJaynes & Christopher Curmi-Hall, "Transforming School Hallways Through Critical Inquiry: Multimodal Literacies for Civic Engagement", Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, Volume 63, Issue 3, November/December 2019:
      [] he is cisqueer, grew up in New York City, and is a first-generation Maltese American.
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:cisqueer.

Hyponyms edit

Translations edit