berdache
English
Etymology
From French bardache, from Italian bardassa, perhaps from Arabic بَرْدَج (bardaj, “slave”). Compare bardash.
Noun
berdache (plural berdaches or berdache)
- (anthropology, dated, now offensive) Among Native Americans, a person who identifies with any of a variety of gender identities which are not exclusively those of their biological sex; a transgender person. [from 19th c.]
- 2005, Michael J Horswell, Decolonizing the Sodomite, University of Texas 2006, page 20:
- Male berdache have been documented in nearly 150 North American societies, while female berdache (females who take on the lifeways of males) appear in half as many groups.
- 2005, Michael J Horswell, Decolonizing the Sodomite, University of Texas 2006, page 20:
Usage notes
Considered offensive by many Native American communities because of its pejorative and non-American etymology, berdache began to fall out of use in the 1990s; two-spirit and various tribe-specific terms (wergern, etc) are now used instead.
Derived terms
Translations
Native American who identifies with a gender identity not exclusively corresponding to their biological sex — See also translations at two-spirit
See also
Portuguese
Noun
berdache m, f (plural berdaches)
- two-spirit (native American who is transgender or belongs to a third gender)
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