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Transphobe vs Transphobia - What's the difference?

transphobe | transphobia | Derived terms |

Transphobe is a derived term of transphobia.


As nouns the difference between transphobe and transphobia

is that transphobe is a person who fears or has a negative perception of trans people and/or transsexuality/transgenderism while transphobia is fear or hatred of transsexuality or transgenderism, or of trans individuals.

transphobe

English

Noun

(en noun)
  • A person who fears or has a negative perception of trans people and/or transsexuality/transgenderism.
  • * 1999 , Gordene O. Mackenzie, "50 Billion Galaxies of Gender: Transgendering the Millennium", in Reclaiming Genders: Transsexual Grammars at the Fin de Siècle (ed. Kate More & ), Cassell (1999), ISBN 0304337773, page 214:
  • The object of scorn in the films are not transpersons, but the bigoted transphobes who are made to look like fools.

    Quotations

    *

    transphobia

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • Fear or hatred of transsexuality or transgenderism, or of trans individuals.
  • * 1998 , Kate Bornstein, My Gender Workbook :
  • It is not really a debate about privacy and personal safety versus politics, so much as an impulse towards pride and a rejection of internalized transphobia .
  • * 2006 , Susan Stryker, Stephen Whittle, The Transgender Studies Reader :
  • In this case, transphobia is represented in Pollock's terms as both the "condition and the effect" of Cameron's social existence.
  • (chemistry) The preference of pairs of high-trans effect soft ligands to avoid being mutually trans by becoming cis and having other low-trans effect hard ligands trans to themselves.
  • * 2002 December 2, José Vicente, Aurelia Arcas, Delia Bautista, M. Carmen Ram??rez de Arellano, Mono- and di-nuclear complexes of ortho-palladated and -platinated 4,4?-dimethylazobenzene with bis(diphenylphosphino)methane. More data on transphobia.'' in the ''Journal of Organometallic Chemistry , volume 663, issues 1-2, pages 164–172:
  • This unusual reactivity and the selectivity observed can be explained as a consequence of the high transphobia of aryl and P-donor ligands
  • * 2009 , José Vicente, Coordination chemistry of metal enolato complexes'', in ''The chemistry of metal enolates , edited by Jacob Zabicky, page 316:
  • The reactions of trans''-[Pt(Mef)Br(PPh3)2] with AgBF4 and Ph3ECHC(O)R (E = P, R = Me, OMe, Ph; E = As, R = Me) afford only ''trans''-[Pt(Mef){OC(=CHEPh3)R}(PPh3)2] because the ''C''-alkyl/''C''-ylide transphobia''' is greater than the ''C''-alkyl/''O''-ylide '''transphobia and also because of the lower steric requirement of the ''O -ylide ligand.
  • * 2014 , Robert H. Crabtree, The Organometallic Chemistry of the Transition Metals (ISBN 1118788249), page 78:
  • In the symbiotic effect, a hard ligand tends to form ionic M-L bonds in which L retains more negative charge than in a soft ligand case, letting the metal ion keep more of its positive charge and hence attract additional hard ligands, . The antisymbiotic effect, also called transphobia , applies to pairs of high trans effect, soft ligands on a soft metal. Where a choice exists, there is a strong tendency for such ligands to avoid being mutually trans by becoming cis and preferring to have low trans effect, hard ligands trans to themselves.

    Derived terms

    * transphobe * transphobic

    Coordinate terms

    * cisphobia * homophobia * heterophobia