Queer Definition Urban Dictionary

Queer Definition Urban Dictionary




🔞 ALL INFORMATION CLICK HERE 👈🏻👈🏻👈🏻

































Queer Definition Urban Dictionary
When a gay guy wheres an earing on his right ear and his right ear only
Wow that guys super homo i can tell cuz of his queering
A person who is like a faggot when they talk or act like one. Maybe both
by Billyboissssssss November 19, 2017
Commonly used in poker , to refer to a hand that is one card short of a straight .
Man , my 5-6-7-9 is a straight-up queer.
She is a queer creature from how she acts.
His queer actions were not questioned nor explained .
queer: Originally pejorative for gay, now being reclaimed by some gay men, lesbians, bisexuals and transgendered persons as a self-affirming umbrella term . Caution: still extremely offensive when used as an epithet .


Originally meant to describe something as unusual or strange. Became a deroggatory word to describe homosexuals. More recently, it has been reclaimed by non-heterosexuals as a word used to describe themselves. Queer can now be used to describe homosexuals, bisexuals, and transgendered people. In scholarly studies the word queer is also used to describe those who practice unconventional sex (e.g. bondage, etc.), therefore even heterosexuals can sometimes be defined as queer.
1. Your brother is a really queer guy.
2. I am a homosexual , part of the queer community .
Awesome band that is closely related (just by sound) to Screeching Weasel . And both bands did a ramones cover, and are friends. Best albums is punk rock confidential , don't back down, beat off.

Queer-coding is a term used to say that characters were given traits/behaviors to suggest they are not heterosexual/ cisgender , without the character being outright confirmed to have a queer identity .
Queer coding is used in media when a character is given traits or behaviors that suggest their queerness without any outright confirmation.
Queer-coding/Queer coding/ Queercoding is a term that can either be used about a fiction character (1) or typically a celebrity (2)
1. When a fictional character in media is given heterosexual or cisgender traits, while not having a confirmed sexuality.
2. When a celebrity uses subtle references through the clothes they wear, their lyrics (artists), their work (etc.), etc, to communicate with the LGBTQ+ community when they are usually not permitted to come out publically yet.
1. "I honestly think Wylan is queer coding in chapter 11"
2. "When someone wears the brand Polari , that is basically them screaming at you that they are gay. Seriously can they queer code any louder?"


A queere is a misspelling of queer (gay) in reference to the popular slogan of the John Deere tractor brand: Nothing Runs Like a Deere. In order to spoof the slogan, replace Deere with queer for the rhyme, then add an "e" to the end of queer to complete the satire . This misspelling, made popular by T-shirt Hell, pictures the outline of an flamboyant homosexual running away from an angry weapon wielding mob...hilarious


A queere is a misspelling of queer (gay) in reference to the popular slogan of the John Deere tractor brand: Nothing Runs Like a Deere. In order to spoof the slogan, replace Deere with queer for the rhyme, then add an "e" to the end of queer to complete the satire . This misspelling, made popular by T-shirt Hell, pictures the outline of an flamboyant homosexual running away from an angry weapon wielding mob...hilarious
A person who is like a faggot when they talk or act like one. Maybe both
by Billyboissssssss November 19, 2017
Commonly used in poker , to refer to a hand that is one card short of a straight .
Man , my 5-6-7-9 is a straight-up queer.
She is a queer creature from how she acts.
His queer actions were not questioned nor explained .
queer: Originally pejorative for gay, now being reclaimed by some gay men, lesbians, bisexuals and transgendered persons as a self-affirming umbrella term . Caution: still extremely offensive when used as an epithet .


Originally meant to describe something as unusual or strange. Became a deroggatory word to describe homosexuals. More recently, it has been reclaimed by non-heterosexuals as a word used to describe themselves. Queer can now be used to describe homosexuals, bisexuals, and transgendered people. In scholarly studies the word queer is also used to describe those who practice unconventional sex (e.g. bondage, etc.), therefore even heterosexuals can sometimes be defined as queer.
1. Your brother is a really queer guy.
2. I am a homosexual , part of the queer community .


What does the Q stand for in LGBTQ? What is queer theory? What does it mean to be queer versus gay? Is there a single queer definition? And what about "Queer Eye for the Straight Guy"? Allow us to help...


By Daniel Villarreal
Saturday, September 21, 2019
  


‘The Craft’ remake will star transgender Latinx actress Zoey Luna


Pete Buttigieg walks back his ‘grumpy’ comment about not reading LGBTQ media


© 2010 - 2022 LGBTQ Nation, All Rights Reserved.

About Us •
Contact Us •
Privacy •
Terms of Service •
Our other sites: GayCities •
Queerty

When people ask “What does the Q stand for in LGBTQ?” some people think its stands for “questioning” (as in someone who is questioning their own sexuality), but it actually stands for “queer,” a reclaimed anti-gay slur describing people whose sexual or gender identities aren’t just cisgender, heterosexual or otherwise “mainstream.”
But what is queer? What does queer mean? Is there a difference between queer versus gay? A queer definition is actually hard to provide because the word itself goes far beyond mere sexual orientation or gender identity. “Queer” itself has a rather queer definition. But let us clear it up so you can better understand the concept and how it applies to the entire LGBTQ spectrum.
In the English language, “queer” originally popped up in the 16th century as a synonym for “strange” and “illegitimate.” In the 19th century, it began to mean “odd,” and by the end of that century people used it as a slur against effeminate men and men who slept with other men. In the 1980s, some gay and lesbian activists began reclaiming “queer” as an empowering self-designation.
Dictionary.com provides the following queer definition: “strange or odd from a conventional viewpoint, unusually different; of a questionable nature or character, suspicious or shady;” and finally, “a term used to refer to a person who is gay or lesbian.”
But the website’s last queer definition is probably the most accurate: “a person whose sexual orientation or gender identity falls outside the heterosexual mainstream or the gender binary.”
As such, all lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people fit this queer definition because their sexual orientation and/or gender identity falls outside of different-sex attraction and the traditional male-female binary.
But the Q in LGBTQ can also signify other sexual orientations and gender identities not covered by the acronym’s preceding letters. If you’re gender-neutral, non-binary, agender, genderfluid, pansexual, asexual, solosexual or something else not covered by LGBT, the Q has got you covered! 
It’d be inaccurate to apply “queer” to any LGBT person you meet because some people still see “queer” as an offensive slur, or just don’t resonate with it as much as other terms.
Similarly, some people feel that “queer” erases their unique identities, lumping them all together in one category rather than proclaiming their unique sexual orientation and gender identity which might fall outside of the LGBT acronym: “I’m not ‘queer’—I’m ‘omnisexual!'”
And when it comes to queer versus gay, not all people agree that “queer” is the same as “gay.” For some, queerness refers to those whose identities, lived experiences and/or outlooks fall out of the mainstream as well as the protection of the mainstream.
A gay, cisgender, white, Christian, American man might describe himself as “gay,” but he and others might not consider him “queer” because his identities have increasingly become mainstream and afford him many social protections.
He benefits from white- and male-privilege and from having mainstream political and religious beliefs. Despite his gayness, his sexual orientation, gender identity, lived experiences and outlooks are common in modern-day America.
Compare this hypothetical gay man to a pansexual, trans, Middle Eastern immigrant living in the United States. This person’s unique combination of sexual orientation, gender identity, lived experiences and outlooks aren’t nearly as “mainstream” as the gay man’s, and they don’t provide nearly as much social protection.
As such, the term “queer” seemingly fits the pansexual person more than the gay man because the pansexual falls outside of the mainstream as well as the protection of the mainstream.
In this way, “queer” can be seen as a counter-cultural identity: Queers who live openly are more vulnerable to intersecting social oppressions, like harassment by the police. But this queer definition can also set up an “Oppression Olympics” that focuses on who is the most queer, devaluing anyone seen as mainstream “insiders.”
In academic circles, queer theory applies to the political definition of queer (above) to question so-called traditional “norms” of sex, gender and desire.
Queer theory emerged in the early 1990s from feminist studies which questioned institutions and social practices that favor men and heterosexuals. As such, queer theory isn’t just about gender identity, sexuality or being LGBTQ. Rather, it focuses on intersecting identities and social power structures — like race, religion, class, disabilities, etc. — and how each one affects societal oppression and privilege.
Rather than accepting that everyone is either male-or-female, masculine or feminine, gay or straight, queer theory sees our sexual/gender identities and choices as “a fluid, fragmented, and dynamic collectivity of possible sexualities” that can change at different points in a person’s lifetime.
As such, queer theory doesn’t see identity as determined by genetics at birth, but rather “something that is constructed through repeated performative actions that are in turn informed by existing social [institutions and] constructions of gender.” For them queer isn’t a fixed identity so much as a critique of the very concept of identity and how it’s created and maintained.
Some practitioners of queer theory consider “queer” as a verb which means “to challenge or change the typically expected function of a common thing,” as in, “By being in a polyamorous, pansexual, BDSM marriage with my genderqueer spouses living around the world, we have all queered the traditional concept of marriage.”
Some people who ask “What is queer?” or “What does queer mean?” may have heard the word used in the reality makeover TV program “Queer Eye for the Straight Guy,” its more modern Netflix reboot “Queer Eye” or the British mini-series turned American Showtime series “Queer as Folk.”
The “queer” in “Queer Eye for the Straight Guy” refers to its five makeover specialists, the “Fab Five” each of whom identifies as gay. In each episode of the original 2003 to 2007 series, the Fab Five helped improve the grooming, fashion, living space, cooking and cultural abilities of heterosexual men, hence the “Straight Guy.” In the Netflix “Queer Eye” reboot, the Fab Five also work with women, trans and gay people.
“Queer as Folk” may sound strange, and that’s probably because the show’s name derives from an old expression from Northern England: “There’s nowt so queer as folk.” In modern English, this expression means, “There’s nothing as strange as people.”
Since “Queer as Folk” started in the U.K. and focused on the friendships and fights within a group of gay male friends (and some other LGBTQ side characters), the title suggested that its “strange” LGBTQ characters would make for good TV viewing.
Some people ask, “Can straight people be queer?” For example, if a straight person is polyamorous or regularly practices BDSM — two sexual proclivities that fall outside of the monogamous mainstream — can they identify as queer?
The answer is “possibly.” Polyamory and kink both fall outside of legal protections: You can legally be fired or have your children taken away for both, and both — like LGBTQ identity — have been vilified as forms of social deviance and mental illness.
But the queer definition is less clear here. Some would argue that straight polyamorists and kinksters aren’t queer because polyamory and kink are external practices rather than internal identities: People do kink, but people are trans. Some might even wrinkle their noses at the idea of straight people trying to apply an anti-LGBTQ slur to themselves when they don’t identify as LGBTQ.
Others might say that if straight polyamorists and kinksters are willing to live openly, create community for others like them, empower the voices of other LGBTQ people and fight for sexual freedom and LGBTQ rights, then sure, they can be part of the “queer family.”
Click through for a deep look at the meaning and symbolism behind the demisexual flag – a powerful symbol of pride and visibility for the demisexual community. 
It’s actually the second Bowie doll that Mattel has released, and part of a growing number of dolls styled after LGBTQ celebrities.
The show helped out by sending his boyfriend on a scavenger hunt while everyone got ready for the big surprise.
Why do we celebrate Pride in June and what do the rainbow flag’s colors mean?
If you identify as neither male nor female, you might be wondering if you are non-binary. Click through to learn more about what it means to be NB.
“I feel unsafe to return to the classroom.”
Outfest Los Angeles wanted to see more queer representation on the Hollywood Walk of Fame – and did something about it.
People often use the terms “sapphic” and “lesbian” interchangeably. Read on to learn the difference between the terms and discover what the sapphic flag looks like.
Raif Derrazi has been living with HIV for more than a decade now, and he has responded to his diagnosis in a remarkable way: by remaking not just his body but his emotional life.

Sit Pop
Workout Sluts
Looner Fetish

Report Page