English

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Etymology

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From homo- +‎ gender.

Adjective

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homogender (not comparable)

  1. Involving people with the same gender.
    • 1997, Judith L. On, “Hard Work, Hard Lovin', Hard Times, Hardly Worth It: Care of Working-Class Men”, in Christie Cozad Neuger, James Newton Poling, editors, The Care of Men[1], Abingdon Press, →ISBN:
      All three settings—the shop, the military, and the world of team sports—have been homogender worlds of cultural masculinity, with much resistance to changing that fact.
    • 2007, Sharyn Graham Davies, Challenging Gender Norms: Five Genders Among Bugis in Indonesia, Thomson Wadsworth, →ISBN, page 26:
      Same-sex heterogender relationships are more openly acknowledged in Bugis society than same-sex homogender relationships.
    • 2008, Merle B. Turner, Friendship, Xlibris, →ISBN, page 20:
      Not all friendships are homogender, as it were, nor within the same class or age group.
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:homogender.

Antonyms

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