I suspect the answer is greater than two for most normal human beings.
Nothing for you to worry about.
Understanding Gender
- "A 2015 Fusion Millennial poll of adults ages 18-34 in the USA found that the majority see gender as a spectrum, rather than a man/woman binary.
- A 2017 Harris Poll of millennials found that 12% identify as Transgender or gender non-conforming.
- Research by J. Walter Thompson Intelligence (the research arm of the global marketing communications company) found that 56% of those aged 13-20 know someone who uses gender-neutral pronouns (such as they/them).
- Leading businesses are beginning to change traditional gender-based marketing of products, such as removing 'pink and blue' clothing and toy aisles."
"You suspect?" Wrong. The answer is that there are two genders, and only two genders. Any other claims demonstrate only that the source is an imbecile incapable of committing logic.
"You suspect?" Wrong. The answer is that there are two genders, and only two genders. Any other claims demonstrate only that the source is an imbecile incapable of committing logic.
No, Loon.
I don't know how many genders there are (or if it matters), but there are far more than two:
63 Genders ― A New Perspective on Sex and Gender
"There are typically two described sexes, Male and Female.
"That sounds pretty simple and obvious, right?
"However, you still need to define by what criteria you define something as Male or Female.
"If you say 'Male is a person with a penis' and 'female is someone with a vagina'
there are people who have both penises AND vaginas in the same naturally occurring body.
"There are also people with indeterminate genders, such as micro-penises, macro-clitorises, no vagina and no penis and other not-frequently-occurring but still natural combinations.
"Likewise if you substitute 'ovaries' or 'uterus' for 'vagina' in the definition.
"Google '
intersex' for all the information you may want to find.
"Maybe you want to define 'sex' genetically as 'Male has an XY chromosome pair' and 'Female has an XX chromosome pair' that still does not account for other chromosomal arrangements that appear naturally, though less frequently, in nature, such as X, Y, XXY, XXYY, XXX, XXXX and XXXXX.
"You can also have people with XX chromosomes who physically present as male (XX males) or vice versa (XY females).
"For a starting reference:
XY sex-determination system - Wikipedia."