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Latest revision as of 23:22, 12 November 2021


File:Bipronominal.png

Bipronominal flag

File:Biprominal 1.png

Alt bipronominal flag

Bipronominal is the act of going by and identifying with exactly two sets of pronouns. It is a subset of multipronominal. The most common example of bipronouns would likely be someone who uses she/her and they/them or someone who uses he/him and they/them pronouns, however bipronoun individuals can go by any two pronoun sets, including neopronouns.

Bipronoun experiences may include:

  1. Using two sets of pronouns at the same time. One might alternate between pronouns every other sentence or in the middle of a sentence.
  2. File:Biprominal 3.png

    Alt bipronominal flag

    Using different sets of pronouns at different times. This is common for genderfluid individuals, they may feel like one gender one day, and a different gender the next, and they may change their pronouns to reflect that.
  3. Letting other individuals decide which pronouns to use. One may simply let other individuals choose which of one's two pronoun sets they want to use.
File:Biprominal 2.png

Alt biprominal flag

History

It is unknown when the term was coined, however it has been used amongst the community since 2019.

Flag

The Bipronominal flag was created by a user going by Al on November 13th, 2020. The black stands for pronouns usually associated with genderlessness, the pale yellow represents neopronouns, purple represents pronouns usually associated with neutral genders, light pink represents pronouns associated with femininity, dark pink represents pronouns usually associated with kingenders, light blue represents pronouns associated with masculinity, and the dark blue represents pronouns associated with fluidity. The design represents the act of pronouns in speech.

The three alternative flags with either pink, purple or blue stripes at the top and green stripes at the bottom were created by FANDOM user wepromiseweretrying

Etymology

The Greek prefix bi- means "two," referencing the fact that bipronominal individuals use two pronouns.

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