Citations:biromantic

English citations of biromantic

Adjective: "romantically attracted to both males and females" edit

2005 2010 2012 2013
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  • 2005, Deborah Smith, "No Sex please, I'm not into it", Sydney Morning Herald, 16 April 2005:
    Now that he's thought longer about it, Michael also likes to describe himself as "biromantic". He is keen to have a romantic relationship with either a man or a woman.
  • 2010, Lori A. Brotto, Gail Knudson, Jess Inskip, Katherine Rhodes, & Yvonne Erksine, "Asexuality: A Mixed-Methods Approach", Archives of Sexual Behavior, Volume 39, Issue 3, June 2010, page 603:
    Eleven percent of all participants chose ‘‘other’’ as their sexual orientation and this was indicated as heteroasexual, biromantic asexual, or homoasexual in free response format, and one participant indicated ‘‘fetishist’’ as his sexual orientation.
  • 2012, Anthony F. Bogaert, Understanding Asexuality, Rowman & Littlefield (2012), →ISBN, page 15:
    So, for example, it is not unusual for an asexual person to say that he is asexual but biromantic, or that she is asexual but heteroromantic.
  • 2012 June 21, Andrew Perron, “Re: LNH/Meta: Queer LNHers”, in rec.arts.comics.creative[1] (Usenet):
    He might be biromantic, but he hasn't told me either way.
  • 2013, Tracey Hickey, "Asexuality should be recognized as a legitimate sexual orientation", The Pitt News (University of Pittsburgh), 14 February 2013:
    Though some people identify as aromantic, others identify as heteromantic, homoromantic, biromantic and everything in between.
  • 2013, Caitlin Donovan, "Ally week fails to include, support all", The Blue Banner (University of North Carolina at Asheville), c. 3 April 2013 [2]:
    I am a biromantic asexual, which means I do not really get sexually attracted to anybody, but I do get romantically attracted to both men and women.

Noun: "one who is romantically attracted to both males and females" edit

2011 2014 2015
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  • 2011, Mark Carrigan, "There’s more to life than sex? Difference and commonality within the asexual community", Sexualities, Volume 14, Number 4, August 2011, page 469:
    Within this group of romantic asexuals, orientation varies: heteroromantics only feel romantic attraction to the opposite sex, homoromantics to the same sex, biromantics to both sexes and panromantics without reference to sex or gender.
  • 2014, Nino Testa, "Language, identity and National Coming Out Day", The Tufts Daily (Tufts University), Volume 68, Number 21, 8 October 2014, page 9:
    For my part, I decided this year not to mention allies in the laundry list of identities represented (I also didn't mention heteroflexible biromantics), underscoring the Sisyphean task of creating an inclusive list of identities.
  • 2015, Erinn Williams, "A Different Sexuality", The George-Anne (Georgia Southern University), Volume 89, Issue 46, 10 February 2015, page 7:
    Panromantics, unlike biromantics, will tend to feel that their partner's gender does little to define their relationship.