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This is a list of animated series with lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex, asexual, genderqueer, and pansexual characters, along with other characters. This list includes fictional characters in animated cartoons, adult animation, and anime. This page includes some of those on the list of crossdressing characters in animated series.
Tsugumi is a classmate who the Pastimers suspect of being an otokonoko. [1] Yū Asuka. Stars Align. Yoshitaka Yamaya. Non-binary. 2019. Yū, formerly known as Yuta, is a kind and mild-mannered person, who Touma thinks of them as nice, even though he is unaware Yū has a crush on him, as noted in the second episode.
Pat O'Neill Riley is fat, has short, curly black hair, and wears thick glasses. Pat typically wears a light-blue pearl-snap Western-style shirt with tan slacks.. In creating the character, actress Sweeney colored her lips beige, and colored in her eyebrows, to create the character's sex-ambiguous appearance.
Nimona made her first appearance in 2012 as a short-form web comic that Stevenson originally published on Tumblr. But the character's origin dates back much further in the artist's life.
The term may be used as "an umbrella term, encompassing several gender identities, including intergender, agender, xenogender, genderfluid, and demigender." [21] Some non-binary identities are inclusive, because two or more genders are referenced, such as androgyne/androgynous, intergender, bigender, trigender, polygender, and pangender. [26 ...
An animated documentary short that is about director Hannah Saidner's parent Neal who transitioned at the age of 62. [200] United States Pete: Pete Lesbian Pete, is a gender non-conforming girl who is part of a baseball team. The animated short is based on the childhood of director Bret Parker's wife Pete Barma. [201] Barma also voices as herself.
I tend to use this a lot with my friends and family for basic things like, ‘I only fly Delta.’ ‘Oh wow you’re so boujee.’”. Sometimes this word can also be used ironically to describe ...
In Western animation, LGBTQ themes means plotlines and characters which are lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, or otherwise queer in series produced in Western countries, and not in Japan (i.e. anime), which can also have similar themes. Early examples included Bugs Bunny in drag, wearing a wig and a dress, as a form of comedy, [1][2] or ...