Fd 84 ways to say GAY, along wh antonyms, related words, and example sentenc at , the world's most tsted ee ths." name="scriptn
Contents:
- DO THE TERM “GAY” REFER TO BI-SEXUALY AS WELL, OR IS EXPLICLY REFERRG TO HOMO-SEXUALY? [CLOSED]
- THE ORIGS OF THE WORD ‘GAY’
- SYNONYMS OF GAY
- GAY
DO THE TERM “GAY” REFER TO BI-SEXUALY AS WELL, OR IS EXPLICLY REFERRG TO HOMO-SEXUALY? [CLOSED]
Billed as a teen-centric variatn on 'The Walkg Dead', 'World Beyond' featur gay uple, former secury officer Felix Carlucci (Ni Tortorella) and his boyiend Will Campbell (Jelani Allad). * word for beyond gay *
Most people make a distctn between gay and bisexual:. People who self-intify as straight, lbian, or gay. The people who don’t make a distctn tend to believe that anyone not pletely heteronormative is gay: for example that bisexualy isn’t real or asexuals mt be (closeted) gays.
THE ORIGS OF THE WORD ‘GAY’
<p><strong>Gary Nunn</strong>: Words n hurt. The way we report on gay people needs to progrs om the distanced medil language of the bad old days</p> * word for beyond gay *
Both bisexual and gay have some variatn meang.
SYNONYMS OF GAY
Synonyms for GAY: animated, active, energetic, animate, lively, brisk, enthiastic, bouncg; Antonyms of GAY: ad, limp, active, animate, lifels, languid, lazy, listls * word for beyond gay *
Gay is sometim ed as a term for only men (as the unterpart to lbian), a term for both gay men and/or women, and sometim a term that’s even broar (as gay rights).
Still, ’s important to regnize that there are terms beyond gay and bisexual.
The medil field tends to e MSM (men who have sex wh men), which clus gay and bisexual men, and also heterosexual men (s female unterpart beg WSW). It’s Pri Month and one of the most lourful words the English language – wh more makeovers than Madonna and more dramatic life stori than Liza Mnelli – is the word ‘gay’!
GAY
* word for beyond gay *
Like every hero, ‘gay’ has an orig story, but even today, scholars are disagreement over the precise journey took to reach the level of fame (or famy) mands nowadays. ‘Gay’ was Germanic before cid to go all French and fancy. The prevailg theory is that ‘gay’ me om Old Germanic, origally soundg like ‘gahi’, which meant ‘fast’ or ‘quick.
Sometime between the 11th and late 15th centuri, ‘gai’ crossed the English Channel and end up as ‘gay’, but kept s French meangs – ‘cheerful’, ‘happy’, ‘merry’, and ‘lively’.