Citations:grey-A

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English citations of grey-A

Noun: "alternative spelling of gray-A"

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  • 2012, Johanna Qualmann, "Asexuality 101", Wom*news, Issue 3, February 2012, page 21:
    A grey-asexual (or grey-A) can be anyone who does not quite fall into either the sexual or asexual category.
  • 2013 August 6, Kate Bornstein, My New Gender Workbook: A Step-by-Step Guide to Achieving World Peace Through Gender Anarchy and Sex Positivity, Routledge, →ISBN:
    ... sexual congruency. @badpatient: the asexual community is beautifully diverse— i've identified as ace for ~7 years and keep discovering new elements to ace identities @quarridors Grey asexual or grey-A people are in the “grey area” between []
  • 2021 February 24, Ronica Mukerjee, Linda Wesp, Randi Singer, Dane Menkin, Clinician's Guide to LGBTQIA+ Care: Cultural Safety and Social Justice in Primary, Sexual, and Reproductive Healthcare, Springer Publishing Company, →ISBN, page 99:
    In fact, asexual vary in [...] (b) the levels of attraction and desire they experience along a fluid continuum (e.g., demisexual, grey-A), and (c) the genders toward which they experience attraction and desire.3 To illustrate some of the ... asexuals are also Chapter 7 Asexual Patient Care 99.
  • 2018 May 14, Jennifer Higginbotham, Mark Albert Johnston, Queering Childhood in Early Modern English Drama and Culture, Springer, →ISBN, page 51:
    ... sexual ones, in sonnets 134 and 135. According to AVEN's definition, “Grey-asexuality is a part of the sexuality spectrum that is close to asexuality. Grey-as may not want to identify as asexual or sexual for various reasons. A grey-a []