English citations of AGAB

assigned gender at birth edit

  • 2017, K Hoffman, Navigating University Bureaucracy for Social Change: Transgender & Gender-Nonconforming Students:
    Transgender​: An adjective to describe a person who does not identify with their assigned gender at birth (AGAB). May be abbreviated as “trans.”
  • 2019 Fall, Elliot Bailey, “Fashion Fluid”, in Insight Magazine[1], volume 13, number 1, Reno, NV: University of Nevada, Reno, page 39:
    Since I came out to myself, I felt myself stop dressing in the way I thought I was "supposed" to dress based on my assigned gender at birth (AGAB). [] It can still be scary to dress in a way that doesn't match what I was taught based on my AGAB, but it's also really empowering to embrace who I truly am and share it with everyone.
  • 2019 November 23, Serena Sonoma, “India's Trans Bill Is Being Heavily Critiqued by the Trans Community”, in Out Magazine:
    Transgender people's gender identity is different from their assigned gender at birth (AGAB).

assigned/assumed [to be a] girl at birth edit

  • 2017, Janna Barkin, He's Always Been My Son: A Mother’s Story about Raising Her Transgender Son, Jessica Kingsley Publishers (→ISBN), page 22:
    Transboy: A child who was assigned a female sex at birth and has a boy gender identity.
    [...]
    Bio-girl: An individual who was born with girl parts and assumed to be a girl at birth (AGAB).