bisexual

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See also: bisexuál

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From bi- +‎ -sexual, via the French bisexuel (bi-, sexuel). Attested since 1792 as a synonym in botany for "hermaphroditic" ("having male and female parts"). First used of sexuality in Richard von Krafft-Ebing's 1886 Psychopathia Sexualis (in German) and Charles Gilbert Chaddock's 1892 English translation thereof, due to the theory that people were naturally attracted to the opposite sex and so the brain or mind of a person attracted to "both" sexes (or to the same sex) must be partly of another sex and thus "hermaphroditic".

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /baɪˈsɛk.sju.əl/
  • (US) IPA(key): /baɪˈsɛk.ʃu.əl/
  • (file)

Adjective

bisexual (comparative more bisexual, superlative most bisexual)

  1. (of humans or other animals) Sexually attracted to both same-gendered and different-gendered partners. Similar to pansexual
    Synonyms: (slang) AC/DC, (jocular) ambidextrous, (colloquial) bi, omnifutuent
    Antonym: monosexual
  2. (chiefly botany) Having both male and female parts, characteristics, or functions.
    1. (botany) Of flowers: having both pollen and seeds.
    2. (botany) Of sporophytes: having both male and female organs.
    3. (botany) Of gametophytes: producing both eggs and sperm.
    4. (botany) Of fungi: producing both the "female" ascogonium and the "male" antheridium.
    5. (rare) Hermaphroditic/intersex, being both male and female, or alternating between being male and being female.
      Midrash and Zohar present Adam as hermaphroditic or bisexual.
      • 2004, Lois Bragg, Oedipus Borealis: The Aberrant Body in Old Icelandic Myth and Saga, →ISBN:
        To say that Loki is bisexual means that he readily alternates between the male and female sexes, becoming female at will or as needed.
      • 2013, Zainab Bahrani, Women of Babylon: Gender and Representation in Mesopotamia, →ISBN:
        Among the arguments put forth for Ishtar's hermaphroditic or bisexual character is the practice of transvestism in religious rites associated with her (e.g. Harris 2000: 170; Groneberg 1986: 39).
      • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:bisexual.
    6. Androgynous.
      • 1947, Louise Pound, Kemp Malone, Arthur Garfield Kennedy, William Cabell Greet, American Speech:
        The bisexual name, such as Marion and Carol (and Evelyn and Vivian in England), is frequently a source of annoyance and embarrassment to the letter writer, who, if he does not know his ambiguously named correspondent personally  []
      • 1976, Frank V. Fowlkes, The Peruvian Contracts: A Novel, Putnam Publishing Group, →ISBN, page 128:
        At the desk, he completed the registration card, signing his name Jean Cable and giving a New York address. He did not know for sure that he was being pursued, but if so, he knew his pursuers would check new registrations around the city. The bisexual name would give them one more obstacle []
      • 1984, The Wallace Stevens Journal:
        And although Stevens introduces Nanzia Nunzio as a woman, the inflections of the bisexual name and the symbolism implicit in the messenger's characteristics suggest that the "contemplated spouse" is something more than a woman.
      • 2003, Efrat Tseëlon, Masquerade and Identities: Essays on Gender, Sexuality and Marginality, Routledge, →ISBN, page 59:
        Consider the identity play of the French artist who gave herself the bisexual name of Claude Cahun (1894–1954).
      • 2005, Minnesota Law Review, volume 89, number 6, page 1762:
        On August 16, in Mankato, Blue Earth County, Minnesota, Michael McConnell alone applied for a marriage license for himself and Baker, under his new adoptive name. The "bisexual name of Pat [] "
      • 2013, Marina Warner, Joan of Arc: The Image of Female Heroism, Oxford University Press, USA, →ISBN, page 307:
        The Bionic Woman of the television serial of the seventies, though she wears ordinary dress most of the time, has the bisexual name of Jamie Summers.
  3. (chiefly biology) Having two distinct sexes, male and female (as contrasted with unisexual or hermaphroditic).
    • 1914, Leonard Doncaster, The Determination of Sex, page 120:
      It is probable, therefore, that hermaphroditism must be regarded as a variation from an earlier condition in which the sexes were separate, and that the hermaphrodites which occasionally appear in normally bisexual species are produced by variations occurring sporadically in the same direction.
    • 1925, Contributions from the Zoological Laboratory, University of Pennsylvania. Zoological Laboratory, page 204:
      We also know that bisexual species reproduce during a longer period than hermaphrodite species.
    • 1981, Mosaic, page 4:
      The second line of inquiry has to do with the ultimate fate of unisexual species. Are they doomed to more rapid extinction than bisexual species? On the assumption that unisexual populations lack genetic variation, most theoretical studies  []
  4. (chiefly biology) Involving two sexes (particularly with regard to reproduction; contrast parthenogenetic or asexual).
    • 1908, Science Progress in the Twentieth Century: A Quarterly Journal of Scientific Work & Thought, page 41:
      [] where the parthenogenetic and bisexual generations do not differ in any character except their manner of reproduction []
    • 1913, Kammerer's Annual Report of the Smithsonian Institution of 1912, in the Congressional Serial Set, page 425:
      But it does not agree with our idea of orthodox sexual reproduction, since many generations may pass without the appearance of males. The reproductive products at such times are purely feminine—that is, eggs which develop without having been fertilized by a male cell, the spermatozoan. We may distinguish this form of reproduction from sexual reproduction, in the restricted sense, or bisexual reproduction, as unisexual or parthenogenetic reproduction.
    • 1913, Francis H. Buzzacott, Mary Isabel Wymore, Bi-sexual Man: Or, Evolution of the Sexes, Life Science Inst, page 72:
      [W]e began by noting the social advantages of bisexual reproduction, showing that bisexual beings are free and equal, and thus capable of entire community and fraternity. Thereafter, we treated the subject of bisexual reproduction more particularly: describing the ovatestis and its functions, showing how separate ovaries and testes were developed from the original ovatestes, and indicating the results of such differentiation, [] . Next, we considered asexual versus sexual reproduction: []
    • 1983, Entomological Society of America, Bulletin of the Entomological Society of America:
      Recall from earlier in this paper that H. longicornis consists of obligatory bisexual diploid races (20+XX 0; 20+X) [] and variance is obscured because of the simultaneous variables of method of reproduction (bisexuality vs. thelytoky) and   []

Synonyms

Hyponyms

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Translations

Noun

bisexual (plural bisexuals)

  1. A person who is bisexual.
    Synonym: (colloquial) bi
    Hypernym: LGBT
    • 1984, Women and deviance, page 63:
      Several chapters are devoted to the investigations of the origins and influences prevalent in the life of a bisexual with the latter portion of the book devoted to three extensive in-depth interviews with three bisexuals.
  2. (botany, rare) A plant or fungus, or part thereof, which is bisexual.
  3. (chiefly biology) An organism (that is, a species) which has male and female sexes.
    • 1999, Russian Journal of Herpetology:
      The direct way to solve this dilemma is to study the inheritance of some specific features of genomic DNA of bisexual species by the genome of unisexual species . It seems possible to study this if the recent bisexuals resemble their ancestral  []

Synonyms

Translations

See also

References

  1. ^ In Palisot de Beauvois's "Memoir of Observations on the Plants denominated Cryptogamick", read February 17, 1792, and published in the 1793 Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, page 211, says "It appears that the urn is a bisexual flower, containing a capsule more or less pedunculated, according to the length of the tube." Other earlier uses are in Robert John Thornton's Reformed Sexual System of Linnaeus in The Philosophical Magazine (1808), and in James Lee's Introduction to the Science of Botany (1810), which includes an early call to eschew hermaphrodite in favor of bisexual.
  2. ^ Besides Krafft-Ebing's and Chaddock's works, e.g. the 1906 English translation of Otto Weininger's 1903 Geschlecht und Charakter (Sex and Character) says certain people have "from the beginning an inclination to both sexes; they are, in fact, bisexual." The 1915 edition of Havelock Ellis's Sexual Inversion also shows the sense development: "there is sexual attraction to both sexes, a condition formerly called psychosexual hermaphroditism, but now more usually bisexuality."

Catalan

Pronunciation

Adjective

bisexual m or f (masculine and feminine plural bisexuals)

  1. bisexual

Noun

bisexual m or f by sense (plural bisexuals)

  1. bisexual

Related terms

Interlingua

Adjective

bisexual (not comparable)

  1. bisexual

Noun

bisexual (plural bisexuales)

  1. bisexual

Romanian

Etymology

Borrowed from French bisexuel. Equivalent to bi- +‎ sexual.

Pronunciation

Adjective

bisexual m or n (feminine singular bisexuală, masculine plural bisexuali, feminine and neuter plural bisexuale)

  1. bisexual

Declension

Noun

bisexual m (plural bisexuali, feminine equivalent bisexuală)

  1. bisexual

Declension

Related terms

Spanish

Etymology

From bi- +‎ sexual.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /biseɡˈswal/
  • Audio (Venezuela):(file)
  • Rhymes: -al
  • Syllabification: bi‧se‧xual

Adjective

bisexual m or f (masculine and feminine plural bisexuales)

  1. bisexual

Noun

bisexual m or f by sense (plural bisexuales)

  1. bisexual

Further reading