English edit

Etymology edit

homo- +‎ romantic

Adjective edit

homoromantic (comparative more homoromantic, superlative most homoromantic)

  1. Romantically attracted to those of the same gender.
    • 2009, Jennifer Byrne, "He's Just Not That Into Anyone, Pop Matters, 31 August 2009
      Often, however, asexual people will also identify with a particular sexual orientation, minus the sexual aspect, and may define themselves as heteroromantic, homoromantic, biromantic, transromantic or panromantic.
    • 2012 October 5, Kristen Hammond, “Gettin’ down with the sexuality spectrum and where we fit”, in The Elm:
      It does not address other kinds of sexuality such as demisexual (sexual attraction is experienced only when accompanied by a strong emotional attraction), pansexual (attraction across all gender identities and biological sexes. Think “gender blind”), and the romantics (Homoromantic/heteroromantic/aromantic making attraction experienced romantically rather than sexually) among others.
    • 2013 October 21, Helena Horton, “What is Asexuality?”, in York Vision:
      Thus, you can be asexual and biromantic (romantically attracted to men and women), panromantic (romantically attracted to any gender identity), homoromantic (romantically attracted to members of the same sex), or heteroromantic (romantically attracted to members of the opposite sex). Some aces are asexual and aromantic, meaning they enjoy platonic friendships, but don’t experience romantic attraction.
    • 2015 February 23, Alix O'Neill, “What It Feels Like To Be Asexual In A Sex-Obsessed World”, in Marie Claire:
      There are different types of ‘aces’, with asexuals being heteroromantic (romantically attracted to the opposite sex); homoromantic (to the same sex); biromantic (to both sexes); panromantic (to both sexes and transsexuals); or aromantic (experiencing little or no romantic attraction to anyone).

Noun edit

homoromantic (plural homoromantics)

  1. One who is romantically attracted to people of the same gender.

Antonyms edit

Derived terms edit

Related terms edit

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See also edit