Dictionary Definition
bisexual adj
1 sexually attracted to both sexes [ant: heterosexual, homosexual]
2 having an ambiguous sexual identity [syn:
epicene] n : a person
who is sexually attracted to both sexes [syn: bisexual
person]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adjective
- A flower having both male and female parts. See perfect.
- Sexually attracted to persons (but not only humans) of either sex.
- Hermaphroditic.
- Midrash and Zohar present Adam as hermaphroditic or bisexual.
Synonyms
- AC/DC qualifier slang, ambidextrous qualifier jocular, bi qualifier colloquial
Translations
botany: having sex organs of both sexes
- Dutch: tweeslachtig
- Finnish: kaksineuvoinen
- French: bisexué , bisexuée
- Italian: bisessuale, ermafrodita
- Maltese: bisesswali, mara-raġel
- Portuguese: bissexuado , bissexuada
sexually attracted to persons of either sex
- Dutch: biseksueel
- Estonian: biseksuaalne
- Finnish: biseksuaalinen
- French: bisexuel , bisexuelle
- German: bisexuell
- Italian: bisessuale and
- Maltese: bisesswali
- Portuguese: bissexual and
hermaphrodite See hermaphrodite
Noun
- A person who is bisexual. Someone attracted to persons of either gender
Synonyms
- bi qualifier colloquial
Translations
- Dutch: biseksueel and
- Estonian: biseksuaal, bi
- Finnish: biseksuaali, (colloquial) bi
- French: bisexuel , bisexuelle
- Italian: bisessuale and , bisex and
Romanian
Etymology
bissexuelPronunciation
Adjective
Extensive Definition
Bisexuality is a sexual
orientation which refers to the romantic
and/or sexual attraction
of individuals to others of both genders (socially) or sexes (biologically). Bisexuals are
not necessarily equally attracted to men and women and may even
shift between states of finding either gender or sex exclusively
attractive over the course of time. However, some bisexuals are and
remain fairly static in their level of attraction throughout their
adult life.
In the mid-1940s, Alfred
Kinsey devised the Kinsey scale
in an attempt to measure sexual orientation and activity. The
7-point scale has a rating of 0 ("exclusively heterosexual") to 6
("exclusively homosexual").
Bisexuals cover most of the scale's values (1–5), which range
between "predominantly heterosexual, only incidentally homosexual"
(1) to "predominantly homosexual, only incidentally heterosexual"
(5). In the middle of the scale (3) is "equally heterosexual and
homosexual". and elsewhere in the animal kingdom throughout
recorded history, the term bisexuality (like the terms hetero- and
homosexuality) was only coined in the 19th century.
Description
Bisexual people are not necessarily attracted equally to both sexes.Some bisexuals make a distinction between
gender and sex. Gender is defined in these
situations as a social or
psychological
category, characterized by the common practices of men and women.
For example, the fact that women wear skirts and dresses
in Western society while men traditionally do not is a gender
issue. Sex in this case is defined as the biological difference between
males and females, prior to any social conditioning. Bisexuals in
this sense may be attracted to more than one gender but only to one
sex. For example, a male bisexual may be attracted to aspects of
men and masculinity, but not to the male body.
Bisexuality is often misunderstood as a form of
adultery or polyamory, and a popular
misconception is that bisexuals must always be in relationships
with men and women simultaneously. Rather, individuals attracted to
both males and females, like people of any other orientation, may
live a variety of sexual lifestyles. These include lifelong
monogamy, serial
monogamy, polyamory, polyfidelity, casual sexual activity with
individual partners, casual group sex, and
celibacy. For those
with more than one sexual partner, these may, or may not, all be of
the same gender.
Terminology
The term bisexual was first used in the 19th century to refer to intersexed people. By 1914 it had begun to be used in the context of sexual orientation.- Biphobia describes a fear or condemnation of bisexuality, usually based in a belief that only heterosexuality and homosexuality are genuine orientations and appropriate lifestyles. Bisexual persons may also be the target of homophobia from those who consider only heterosexuality appropriate. The reverse can also apply in that bisexual persons may be targets of heterophobia or discrimination by some homosexuals.
- Passively bi, aka open-minded is a non-sex specific term that describes a heterosexual/bi-curious person who is open to incidental or direct contact (typically in a group sex scenario) from a member of the same sex or a homosexual/bi-curious person who is open to contact with members of the opposite sex under the same scenario, which usually doesn't involve reciprocation.
- Actively bi is a non-sex specific term that can describe a bi-curious person who initiates direct contact with the sex opposite his or her usual identity (either hetero- or homosexual); it can also refer to a bisexual person who engages in contact with members of both sexes on a fairly regular basis.
Modern Western prevalence of bisexuality
A 2002 survey in the United States by National Center for Health Statistics found that 1.8 percent of men ages 18–44 considered themselves bisexual, 2.3 percent homosexual, and 3.9 percent as "something else". The same study found that 2.8 percent of women ages 18–44 considered themselves bisexual, 1.3 percent homosexual, and 3.8 percent as "something else". The Janus Report on Sexual Behavior, published in 1993, showed that 5 percent of men and 3 percent of women consider themselves bisexual and 4 percent of men and 2 percent of women considered themselves homosexual.}}Dr. Alfred
Kinsey's 1948 work
Sexual Behavior in the Human Male found that "46% of the male
population had engaged in both heterosexual and homosexual
activities, or "reacted to" persons of both sexes, in the course of
their adult lives". The Kinsey
Institute has stated that "Kinsey said in both the
Male and
Female volumes that it was impossible to determine the number
of persons who are "homosexual" or "heterosexual". It was only
possible to determine behavior at any given time". The
New York Times called his research "conscientious and
comprehensive" and Professor Martin
Duberman called it "skillful" and "a monumental
endeavor".
Despite common misconceptions, bisexuality does
not require that a person be attracted equally to both sexes. In
fact, people who have a distinct but not exclusive preference for
one sex over the other can and often do identify as bisexual. A
recent study by researchers Gerulf Rieger, Meredith L. Chivers, and
J.
Michael Bailey, which attracted media attention in 2005,
purported to find that bisexuality is extremely rare, and perhaps
nonexistent, in men. This was based on results of controversial
penile
plethysmograph testing when viewing pornographic material
involving only men and pornography involving only women. Critics
state that this study works from the assumption that a person is
only truly bisexual if he or she exhibits virtually equal arousal
responses to both opposite-sex and same-sex stimuli, and have
consequently dismissed the self-identification of people whose
arousal patterns showed even a mild preference for one sex. Some
researchers say that the technique used in the study to measure
genital arousal is too crude to capture the richness (erotic
sensations, affection, admiration) that constitutes sexual
attraction. The study, and The
New York Times article which reported it, were subsequently
criticized as flawed and biphobic. Lynn Conway
criticized the author of the study, J.
Michael Bailey, citing his controversial history, and pointing
out that the study has not been scientifically repeated and
confirmed by any independent researchers.
FAIR also criticised the study .
Dr. Fritz Klein
believed that social and emotional attraction are very important
elements in bisexual attraction. For example, a bisexual might be
attracted to both feminine women and feminine men, but have little
interest in masculine individuals. This individual, while they
might be highly attracted to certain members of both sexes, would
be unlikely to be attracted to most males in modern western society
(who tend to be masculine). As this study employed 2-minute clips
of standard heterosexual and homosexual pornography, the study
would be blind to the this type of bisexual. One third of the men
in each group showed no significant arousal. The study did not
claim them to be asexual, and Rieger stated that their lack of
response did not change the overall findings.
Bisexuality in history
In some cultures, historical and literary records
from most literate societies indicate that male bisexuality was
common and indeed expected. These relationships were generally
age-structured as in pederasty or shudo. or gender-structured as in
the Two-Spirit or
bacchá
practices. Most of the commonly cited examples of male
"homosexuality" in previous cultures would more properly be
categorized as bisexuality. Determining the history of female
bisexuality is more problematic, in that women in most of the
studied societies were under the domination of the males, and on
one hand had less self-determination and freedom of movement and
expression, and on the other were not the ones writing or keeping
the literary record. Sappho, however, is
a notable exception.
In 124 CE the bisexual Roman emperor Hadrian met
Antinous, a 13- or 14-year-old boy from Bithynia, and they began
their pederastic relationship. Antinous was deified by Hadrian when
he died six years later. Many statues, busts, coins and reliefs
display Hadrian's deep affections for him. Ancient Rome, Arab countries
up to and including the present, China, and Japan, all exhibit
patterns of analogous bisexual behavior. In Japan in particular,
due to its practice of shudo and the extensive art and
literature associated with it, the record of a primarily bisexual
lifestyle is both detailed and quite recent, dating back as
recently as the 19th century. Bisexual behavior was also common
among Roman and Chinese emperors, the shoguns of Japan, and
others.
Ancient Greece
Ancient
Greek religious texts, reflecting cultural practices,
incorporated bisexual themes. The subtexts varied, from the
mystical to the didactic. For example, Aristophanes
calls them euryprôktoi, meaning "wide arses", and depicts them like
women.
Social status of bisexuality
Historically, bisexuality has largely been free of the social stigma associated with homosexuality, prevalent even where bisexuality was the norm. In Ancient Greece pederasty was not problematic as long as the men involved eventually married and had children. In many world cultures, homosexual affairs have been quietly accepted among upper-class men of good social standing (particularly if married), and heterosexual marriage has often been used successfully as a defense against accusations of homosexuality. On the other hand, there are bisexuals who marry or live with a heterosexual partner because they prefer the complementarity of different sexes in cohabiting and co-parenting but have felt greatly enriched by homosexual relationships alongside the marriage in both monogamous and "open" relationships.Since the 1970s, there have been waves of
bisexual
chic, in which celebrities and other persons of some notoriety
have embraced and advocated bisexuality. This has led to more
acceptance of bisexuals in some regards; however, some have latched
onto bisexual chic for publicity's sake, with varying degrees of
sincerity and permanency. Such celebrities as David Bowie,
Dave
Navarro, Anne Heche and
others have claimed bisexuality only to later renounce the
idea.
The term "flex sex" developed in the late 2000s,
regarding women that generally regard themselves as heterosexual,
but who occasionally have sex with other women.
Some in the homosexual community accuse those who
self-identify as bisexual of duplicity, believing they are really
homosexuals who engage in heterosexual activity merely to remain
socially acceptable. They may be accused of "not doing their part"
in gaining acceptance of "true" homosexuality. Some homosexual
people may also suspect that a self-described bisexual is merely a
homosexual in the initial stage of
questioning their presumed heterosexuality, and will eventually
accept that they are homosexual; this is expressed by a glib saying
in gay culture: "Bi now, gay later." These situations can and do
take place, but do not appear to be true of the majority of
self-described bisexuals. Nonetheless, bisexuals do sometimes
experience lesser acceptance from homosexual people, because of
their declared orientation. Bisexual experimentation is also common
in adolescents of every sexual orientation.
Bisexuals are often associated with men who
engage in
same-sex activity while closeted or
heterosexually married. The majority of such men—said to be living
on the down-low—do
not self-identify as bisexual.
Because some bisexual people do not feel that
they fit into either the homosexual
or the heterosexual world, and because they have a tendency to be
"invisible" in public, some bisexual persons are committed to
forming their own communities,
culture, and political movements. However, since "Bisexual
orientation can fall anywhere between the two extremes of homosexuality and heterosexuality", some
who identify as bisexual may merge themselves into either
homosexual or heterosexual society. Still other bisexual people see
this merging as enforced
rather than voluntary; bisexual people can face exclusion
from both homosexual and heterosexual society on coming out.
Psychologist Beth Firestein states that bisexuals also tend to
internalize social tensions related to their choice of partners.
Firestein suggests bisexuals may feel pressured to label themselves
as homosexuals instead of occupying a difficult middle ground in a
culture that has it that if bisexuals are attracted to people of
both sexes, they must have more than one partner, thus defying
society's value on monogamy. Specific therapy methods have been
developed for bisexuals to address this concern.
Another symbol of bisexual identity that uses the
color scheme of the bisexual pride flag is a pair of overlapping
pink and blue triangles, the pink triangle being a well-known
symbol for the homosexual community, forming purple where they
intersect.
Many homosexual and bisexual individuals have a
problem with the use of the pink
triangle symbol as it was the symbol that Hitler's regime used
to tag homosexuals (similar to the yellow Star of
David that is constituted of two opposed, overlapping
triangles). Because pink triangles were used in the persecution of
homosexuals in the Nazi regime, a double moon symbol was devised
specifically to avoid the use of triangles. This bisexual symbol is
a double moon that is formed when the sex-specific attributes of
the astrological symbol of Mars & Venus (representing
heterosexual union) are reduced to the two circles open on both
ends, thus symbolizing that bisexuals are open to either-sex
unions. The color of the bisexual double moon symbol varies. The
symbol is most often displayed with rainbow colors, signifying that
bisexuals belong to the gay community. It also may appear with the
pink-purple-blue colors of the bisexual pride flag. The double moon
symbol is common in Germany and surrounding countries.
Many species of animals are involved in the act
of forming sexual and relationship bonds between the same sex; even
when offered the opportunity to breed with members of the opposite
sex, they picked the same sex. Some of these species are gazelles,
antelope, bison, and sage grouse.
In some cases animals will choose intercourse
with different sexes at different times in their life, and
sometimes will perform intercourse with different sexes at random.
Homosexual intercourse can also be seasonal in some animals like
male walruses, who often engage in homosexual intercourse with each
other outside of the breeding season and will revert to
heterosexual intercourse during breeding season.
Bisexuality in culture
Comparatively positive and notable portrayals of bisexuality can be found throughout mainstream media.In movies such as: The
Pillow Book (film); Alexander
(film);
The Rocky Horror Picture Show; Henry and
June; Chasing Amy;
Kissing
Jessica Stein, The Fourth
Man, Basic
Instinct and Brokeback
Mountain.
In popular
music, many of the songs of The Smiths are
commonly cited as classic examples. In the songs and stage
presentation of Suzie Quatro
and Joan
Jett, there have been additional examples.
In notable graphic
novels,
Love and Rockets (1981 to 1996) subtly portrays bisexuality;
Krazy
Kat (1913 to 1944) is a comic-strip character whose love is not
limited by sex; Alan Moore's
Lost
Girls (1991 to 2006) portrays bisexual versions of three famous
literary characters; Terry Moore's
Strangers
in Paradise (1993 to 2007) includes several bisexual
characters.
Notable novels containing significant bisexual
characters are:
- Lisa Alther's Five Minutes in Heaven
- Sean David Wright's Two for One--a novel about having choices
- Anne Rice's Cry to Heaven
- Rosamond Lehmann's Dusty Answer
- Mary Renault's The Last of the Wine and The Persian Boy
- Colette's Claudine novels
- Jonathan Franzen's The Corrections
- David Leavitt's The Lost Language of Cranes and While England Sleeps
- Jeanette Winterson's The Passion
- Calum Brodie's Milk and Cookies
- Marge Piercy's Woman on the Edge of Time
- Thomas Pynchon's Against the Day
- Alice Walker's The Color Purple
- Jane Rule's Young in One Another's Arms
- Gregory Maguire's Wicked and its sequel, Son of a Witch
- Sylvia Brownrigg's The Metaphysical Touch
- Robert Sawyer's Neanderthal Parallax
- Michael Chabon's The Mysteries of Pittsburgh
- Ursula K. Le Guin's The Dispossessed
- Marc Acito's How I Paid For College: A Novel of Sex, Theft, Friendship, and Musical Theatre
- Sarah Waters' Tipping The Velvet
- Anne Rice's The Vampire Armand
Non-fiction scholarship, such as Marjorie
Garber's Vice Versa: Bisexuality and the Eroticism of Everyday
Life (1995), Camille
Paglia's Sexual Personae (1990) and Louis Crompton's Byron and
Greek Love (1985), has uncovered previously hidden histories of
bisexuality.
On the TV sitcom Will &
Grace, the character of Karen
Walker appears to be bisexual and—although married
to a man—often kisses Grace and seems to have had many female
lovers throughout her life. The character Jack
Harkness of Doctor Who and
Torchwood
is from 51st century, in which mankind has become more open minded
sexually since it's integration with alien cultures. He is often
described as "omnisexual" by his fans, remarking on the question of
sexual orientation "You people and your quaint little categories."
Harkness is the first openly non-heterosexual character depicted in
the long-running Doctor Who. Torchwood also features bisexual
characters Toshiko
Sato, and Ianto Jones.
Rebecca
Romijn portrayed a bisexual con artist in the film Femme
Fatale.
In the sci-fi television
series Babylon 5,
characters including Susan
Ivanova and Talia
Winters are portrayed as bisexual or pansexual. There seems to
be a general feeling in the show that it is accepted and common for
people to follow their hearts wherever they may take them, ignoring
sex. Other examples include the characters Marcus Cole
and Stephen
Franklin posing as a married couple, and series creator
J. Michael Straczynski indicating that the station commander
John Sheridan would have been propositioned by the male
Lumati
ambassador if Susan Ivanova had not been handling those
negotiations.
In the 1996 Broadway musical turned movie
Rent,
Idina
Menzel plays Maureen Johnson, a character who has a
relationship with both Mark Cohen (Anthony Rapp
[who is openly bisexual in real life]), and Joanne Jefferson
(Tracie
Thoms/Freddie
Walker). In the musical, Menzel's character sings the following
lines in the song "Take Me or Leave Me":
- Ever since puberty, everybody stares at me,
- Boys, girls—I can't help it, baby
In the television program "Bottom",
Richie is shown consistently throughout the series to be trying to
get a girlfriend but to be either secretly attracted to men or
accidentally finding more luck with men. He maintains a facade of
heterosexuality throughout this, although in the stage adaptations
he is shown to be far more attracted to men but still also to
women.
In the video game series Metal Gear
Solid, the villain Vamp is known to be bisexual, as reported by
Hideo Kojima. In the Fox television series, The O.C.,
Marissa
Cooper (played by Mischa
Barton ) has a same-sex fling with the character Alex
Kelly, played by Olivia
Wilde.
The high rated MTV series,
A Shot At Love With Tila Tequila, is a bisexual reality show.
Tila
Tequila or Tila Nguyen,
is the bisexual bachelorette, trying to find love from 16 straight
males and 16 lesbians.
Media stereotypes about bisexuality
There are also negative media portrayals—references sometimes made to stereotypes or mental disorders. The television show Friends sported a short song about the topic that expresses a common prejudice on the subject:- Sometimes men love women,
- Sometimes men love men,
- Then there are bisexuals
- Though some just say they're kidding themselves
- Sometimes men love men,
On the HBO drama Oz,
Christopher
Meloni played Chris
Keller, a bisexual sociopath who tortured, raped, and had
numerous sexual encounters with various men and women whom he met.
Desperate
Housewives features Andrew
Van De Kamp.
A Saturday
Night Live joke ran thus:
- "A bisexual is a person who reaches down the front of somebody's pants and is satisfied with whatever they find." -- Dana Carvey as The Church Lady, Saturday Night Live.
Movies in which the bisexual characters conceal
murderous neuroses include Basic
Instinct, Black Widow, Blue Velvet,
Cruising,
and Girl,
Interrupted.
In one of his comedy routines, George
Carlin admits to thinking about what a curse bisexuality must
be: "Could you imagine wanting to fuck everybody you meet? Think of
all the phone numbers you'd accumulate! You might as well just walk
around with the White Pages
under your arms."
See also
Further reading
General
- Garrett Jones. Coming Clean about Bisexuality, 2000. Free download
- Louis Crompton. Homosexuality and Civilization, Cambridge, Mass. and London, 2003. ISBN 0-674-01197-X
- Michel Larivière. Homosexuels et bisexuels célèbres, Delétraz Editions, 1997. ISBN 2-911110-19-6
- Sigmund Freud. Three Contributions to the Theory of Sex. ISBN 0486416038
Ancient Greece
- Kenneth J. Dover. Greek Homosexuality, New York; Vintage Books, 1978. ISBN 0-394-74224-9
- Thomas K. Hubbard. Homosexuality in Greece and Rome, U. of California Press, 2003. ISBN 0-520-23430-8
- Herald Patzer. Die Griechische Knabenliebe [Greek Pederasty], Wiesbaden: Franz Steiner Verlag, 1982. In: Sitzungsberichte der Wissenschaftlichen Gesellschaft an der Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main, Vol. 19 No. 1.
- W. A. Percy III. Pederasty and Pedagogy in Archaic Greece, University of Illinois Press, 1996. ISBN 0-252-02209-2
By country
- Stephen O. Murray and Will Roscoe, et al. Islamic Homosexualities: Culture, History, and Literature, New York: New York University Press, 1997. ISBN 0-8147-7468-7
- J. Wright & Everett Rowson. Homoeroticism in Classical Arabic Literature. 1998. ISBN 023110507X (pbbk)/ ISBN 0231105061 (hdbk)
- Gary Leupp. Male Colors: The Construction of Homosexuality in Tokugawa Japan, Berkeley, University of California Press, 1995. ISBN 0-520-20900-1
- Tsuneo Watanabe & Jun'ichi Iwata. The Love of the Samurai. A Thousand Years of Japanese Homosexuality, London: GMP Publishers, 1987. ISBN 0-85449-115-5
Modern Western
- Bi Any Other Name : Bisexual People Speak Out by Loraine Hutchins, Editor & Lani Ka'ahumanu, Editor ISBN 1-55583-174-5
- Getting Bi : Voices of Bisexuals Around the World by Robyn Ochs, Editor & Sarah Rowley, Editor ISBN 0-9653881-4-X
- The Bisexual Option by Fritz Klein, MD ISBN 1-56023-033-9
- Bi Men : Coming Out Every Which Way by Ron Suresha and Pete Chvany, Editors ISBN 978-1-56023-615-9
- Bi America : Myths, Truths, And Struggles Of An Invisible Community by William E. Burleson ISBN 978-1-56023-478-4
- Bisexuality in the United States : A Social Science Reader by Paula C. Rodriguez Rust, Editor ISBN 0-231-10226-7
- Bisexuality : The Psychology and Politics of an Invisible Minority by Beth A. Firestein, Editor ISBN 0-8039-7274-1
- Current Research on Bisexuality by Ronald C. Fox PhD, Editor ISBN 978-1-56023-288-5
- Exploring Biphobia. (144 KB PDF). Report on the problems caused by stereotyping of bisexuals.
Film
- Bryant, Wayne M.. Bisexual Characters in Film: From Anais to Zee. Haworth Gay & Lesbian Studies, 1997. ISBN 1-56023-894-1
References
External links
bisexual in Afrikaans: Biseksualiteit
bisexual in Bavarian: Bisexualität
bisexual in Breton: Divrevelezh
bisexual in Bulgarian: Бисексуалност
bisexual in Catalan: Bisexualitat
bisexual in Czech: Bisexualita
bisexual in Welsh: Deurywioldeb
bisexual in Danish: Biseksualitet
bisexual in German: Bisexualität
bisexual in Estonian: Biseksuaalsus
bisexual in Modern Greek (1453-):
Αμφιφυλοφιλία
bisexual in Spanish: Bisexualidad
bisexual in Esperanto: Ambaŭseksamo
bisexual in Persian: دوجنسگرایی
bisexual in French: Bisexualité
bisexual in Scottish Gaelic: Dà-mhiannachd
bisexual in Galician: Bisexualidade
bisexual in Korean: 양성애
bisexual in Croatian: Biseksualnost
bisexual in Indonesian: Biseksualitas
bisexual in Italian: Bisessualità
bisexual in Hebrew: ביסקסואליות
bisexual in Georgian: ბისექსუალობა
bisexual in Kurdish: Bîseksûelî
bisexual in Lithuanian: Biseksualumas
bisexual in Hungarian: Biszexualitás
bisexual in Macedonian: Бисексуалност
bisexual in Dutch: Biseksualiteit
bisexual in Japanese: 両性愛
bisexual in Norwegian: Bifili
bisexual in Polish: Biseksualizm
bisexual in Portuguese: Bissexualidade
bisexual in Romanian: Bisexualitate
bisexual in Russian: Бисексуальность
bisexual in Simple English: Bisexuality
bisexual in Slovak: Bisexualita
bisexual in Slovenian: Biseksualnost
bisexual in Serbian: Бисексуалност
bisexual in Serbo-Croatian: Biseksualnost
bisexual in Finnish: Biseksuaalisuus
bisexual in Swedish: Bisexualitet
bisexual in Turkish: Biseksüellik
bisexual in Yiddish: בייסעקסואלוטעט
bisexual in Contenese: 雙性戀
bisexual in Chinese: 双性恋
bisexual in Tamil: இருபால்சேர்க்கை
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
AC-DC, amphierotic, androgyne, androgynous, auntie, autoerotic, bi-guy, biaxial, bicameral, bicuspid, bifid, biform, binocular, binomial, binominal, bipartite, biped, bipetalous, bipinnate, bisexed, bivalent, bull dyke, butch, catamite, chicken, deviant, dyke, effeminate, fag, faggot, fairy, femme, flit, fricatrice, fruit, gay, gunsel, hermaphrodite, hermaphroditic, homo, homoerotic, homophile, homosexual, homosexualist, invert, lesbian, mannish, nance, pansy, pathic, perverted, punk, queen, queer, sapphic, sapphist, swinging both ways,
transvestite,
tribade, tribadistic, unibivalent