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Drag (clothing)
connotations as a genre of critical vocabulary). The term "drag" may have been given a wider circulation in Polari, a gay street argot in England in the early part of the 20th century. Unlike "threads -
Chastity belt
temptation. Devices have been created for males and females. The term "chastity belt" is also used metaphorically in modern English to imply over protectiveness. The term carries a derisive connotation and may also imply that -
Leather subculture
gay motorcycle clubs included Satyr, established in Los Angeles in 1954; Oedipus, also established in Los Angeles, and the New York Motorbike Club. Early San Francisco clubs included the Warlocks and the California Motor Club. -
Lois Griffin
him because she found his lower-class, easy-going silliness more appealing than the stuffy, uptight suitors in her social circle. Lois was crowned Miss Teen Rhode Island and wanted to pursue a modeling career -
Usher (entertainer)
Atlanta, Georgia, in the belief that the city would provide greater opportunities for showcasing his talent. While in Atlanta, Usher attended the Performing Arts Magnet North Springs High School, and participated in show choir. Usher -
Joss Whedon
New York) is an Academy Award-nominated and Hugo Award winning American writer, television director, executive producer, and creator and head writer of the well-known television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Angel, and Firefly -
Cat o' nine tails
Template:Citations missing Template:Otheruses4 -
Tank Girl
Alan Martin and originally drawn by Jamie Hewlett, and is currently drawn by Rufus Dayglo, Ashley Wood, and Mike McMahon. The official Tank Girl website is now up and running at www.tank-girl.com. -
Alice Walker
Template:Infobox Writer Alice Malsenior Walker (born February 9, 1944) is an African-American author and feminist who received the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1983 for The Color Purple. -
Bai Ling
Template:Infobox actor Bai Ling (traditional Chinese: 白靈; simplified Chinese: 白灵; pinyin: Bái Líng) (born October 10, 1970 ) is a Chinese American actress. Bai is her surname, which literally means "white". Ling, a -
Wicca
figure in Wicca, was arguably homophobic this historical aversion is not now commonly held. Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people are almost always welcomed in individual communities, covens, study groups, and circles. Many LGBT -
Transman
as a male. "FTM" (sometimes FtM, F2M, F-M or FM) is short for "female-to-male", and identifies the general direction of transition (from assigned to actual), and not a conscripted "start" to "finish -
Daphne du Maurier
beloved Cornwall), the daughter of the actor-manager Sir Gerald du Maurier, and granddaughter of the Author and cartoonist, George du Maurier. These connections gave her a head start in her literary career, and her -
Sheila Kuehl
Sheila James Kuehl (born February 9, 1941) is an American politician, and a former child actress, currently the member of the Los Angeles Board of Supervisors for District 3. She most recently served as a -
Hulkling
Template:Superherobox Hulkling (Theodore "Teddy" Altman) is a fictional comic book superhero and a member of the Young Avengers, a team of superheroes in the Marvel Comics universe. Hulkling's appearance is patterned on the -
Queer
offensive and derisive, and by others as a re-appropriated term used to describe a sexual orientation and/or gender identity or gender expression that does not conform to heteronormative society. Since its emergence in -
Neal Cassady
the inspiration for the character of Dean Moriarty in Jack Kerouac's classic On the Road. Born in Salt Lake City and raised by an alcoholic father in Denver, Cassady spent much of his youth -
Pink triangle
had to wear the yellow badge (in addition to any other badge representing other reasons for incarceration), and "anti-social individuals" (which included vagrants and "work shy" individuals) the black triangle. There hasn't been -
Glory hole (sexual slang)
in civil engineering, where water from a reservoir is quickly "sucked" through a glory hole and out of a dam. It could also have its roots in one of several meanings from seamen and shipbuilding. -
List of transgender-related topics
at the time of composition, due to inappropriate and/or outdated questions or premises. Not only psychology and medicine, but also social sciences deal with transgender people, and each starts from a very different point -
Talia Winters
Talia Winters was a fictional character who appeared on the science fiction television show Babylon 5 during its first and second seasons. She was portrayed by actress Andrea Thompson. Ms. Winters was a licensed, commercial -
Lesbian until graduation
The slang terms lesbian until graduation (LUG), gay until graduation (GUG), or bisexual until graduation (BUG), are terms used to describe women primarily of high-school or college age, who are assumed to be experimenting -
Susan Ivanova
tragic events that happened on Babylon 5 at the very end of the Earth Alliance Civil War, in which she played a major role. During the fifth and final season, she appears only once, in -
Pomosexual
pomosexual community acknowledges this fact and embraces it. The term was coined in October 1997. The term first appeared in the book, PoMosexuals: Challenging Assumptions About Gender and Sexuality by Carol Queen and Lawrence Schimel. -
Canada
expeditions explored, and later settled, the region's Atlantic coast. France ceded nearly all of its colonies in North America to Britain in 1763 after the Seven Years' War. In 1867, with the union of
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Friends Wiki "Friends Central," is a collaborative encyclopedia for everything related to NBC's Friends and its spin-off Joey. Friends is an iconic American situation comedy about a group of friends (Rachel, Monica, Phoebe, Joey, Ross, and Chandler) in the New…