Gay spanish words
Anonymous asked:
So for your LGBT followers... any cool same-sex attracted vocab we can learn? Expressions for coming out of the closet, etc.?
I know a few (given that my brother’s gay) but not many. And least I don’t believe I do.
Well, I’ll give what I do comprehend and followers can accept the lead; and excuse me if I don’t get it right etc.
- ser heterosexual = to be heterosexual; unisex
- ser homosexual = to be homosexual; unisex
- ser bisexual = to be bisexual; unisex
- ser asexual = to be asexual
- ser pansexual = to be pansexual
- ser transexual = to be transexual / transgender [Spanish, appreciate in English, has a habit of using this to be “transgender”; the word for “transgender” would literally be transgénero but it doesn’t exist in Spanish]
- la homosexualidad = homosexuality
- la heterosexualidad = heterosexuality
- ser travestí = to be a transvestite or cross-dresser
- travestido/a = cross-dressing [as an adjective]
- el sexo = physical sex of a person; biological
- el género = gender of a person; a person’s state of mind or their gender roles that they adopt
- el rol de género = gender role (sometimes seen as el papel de género)[“the societal expectations of a pe
How Do You Say "GAY" In Spanish? And Other Languages?
rogerbox21
There is no non-offensive legal title for gay in tagalog, to be say “gay” in a non-offensive way you say “gay” in english, the two words for gay in Tagalog are “bakla” and “bading”, neither of which is without a negative connotation, bakla is probably more negative sounding than bading though.
Carryon22
SCAdian:The s-word?
It rhymes with Missy…My gay friends get offended by it.
USCDiver23
Carryon:It rhymes with Missy…My gay friends get offended by it.
Oh, I liked suckcocker better.
AK8424
Urdu: Gandhu. Literally “ass guy”.
PookahMacPhellimey25
Italian: Gay. There’s also “omosessuale”, but younger people usually apply the English word.
In Dutch we still use “homo” - it’s not considered offensive.
PookahMacPhellimey26
Dr.Drake:.Italian is usually gay; there’s also finocchio “fennel,” but I’m not sure how derogatory that is.
Finocchio is definitely derogatory. It’s not off the scale offensive, but it’s not neutral.
Doug_K27
He who lives by the s-word dies by the s-word.
Hari_Seldon28
EmilyG:The synonyms “gai” (meaning “happy” in Fren
How do you speak "Gay" in your language?
How accomplish you say "Gay & Lesbian" in your language?
I want to know inoffensive and friendly terms of referring "Homosexual"!!
In English: queer , queerIn German: schwul (only for male homosexuals), lesbisch (female h.), vom anderen Ufer, andersrum, linksgestrickt
omosessuale, gay (m), lesbica (f)
<<omosessuale, gay (m), lesbica (f) >>
which language is this please?Spanish: parchita, pargo, pato. It depends what region in SouthAmerica you are. These words belong to slang in Venezuela.
I think that in Spanish we may not hold an exact matched. Obviously, as Guest above pointed out, there are dozens of words to call a queer person. But in essence, the pos "gay" is a neutral word, it has no negative connotations (when used in the instinct "homosexual", not in the sense "lame"). In Spanish, "homosexual" is a tad too technical, and the others are mostly offensive (in the River Plate: maricón, trolo, puto, etc.) a gloomy fact, which may or may not reflect something about our societies. The word "gay&quo
Meaning of gay
- gay 30
- In principle it means "joyful, funny", and for these characteristics it began to be used in Hollywood as a euphemism to name homosexual in cinema. In a short hour it became popular around the world, as it is not necessarily discriminatory or pejorative (yet, in historically intolerant societies it is preferred not to exploit it in public to escape misinterpretations). The etymological origin is very ancient, it comes from the languedoc (Roman Gaul, now south of France) where gai meant "joyful, festive", which in English came first as a cultured and literary voice. In Spanish it differs gay (homosexual) from gay (cheerful, poetic).
- In Latin it means joy, joy, pleasure. It is a surname of Occitan origin (South of France) and popular in Spain. Surname of a former Argentine football player, who officiated as a goalkeeper. He covered in Independent of Avellaneda and America of Cali. Its full name is Carlos Alfredo Gay
- Gay (pronounced guei) . 1- It is an English word that in Spanish translates: homosexual. It applies e
furoya
Danilo Enrique Noreña Benítez
Jorge Luis Tovar Díaz