Citations:quoiromantic

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search

English citations of quoiromantic

Adjective: "(neologism) unable to distinguish romantic attraction from platonic attraction in oneself"

[edit]
2013 2014 2015 2018 2019 2021
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 2017 February, Paul Byron, Sophia Rasmussen, Dani Wright Toussaint, Roanna Lobo, Kerry Robinson, Brett Paradise, ‘You learn from each other’: LGBTIQ Young People’s Mental Health Help-seeking and the RAD Australia Online Director, Sydney: Western Sydney University Young and Well Cooperative Research Centre, →DOI, →ISBN, page 31:
    They listened to me and didn't talk about my gender and sexuality issues when I didn't bring it up. They also never said anything rude or judged me for the alternative or feminine clothes I started to wear. (16, agender/man, grey-asexual/sensual, grey-aromantic, demisexual/sensual, demiromantic, sapiosexual/sensual, sapioromantic, lithsexual/sensual, lithromantic, quoiromantic.)
  • 2018, Christina Lang, "Intimacy and Desire Through the Lens of an Aro-Ace Woman of Color", thesis submitted Bates College, page 69:
    For a while, I thought I might be quoiromantic because of the frustration and confusion I felt about how subjective romantic attraction is.
  • 2018, Ryan A. Miller, "Toward Intersectional Identity Perspectives on Disability and LGBTQ Identities in Higher Education", Journal of College Student Development, Volume 59, Issue 3, May/June 2018:
    These participants identified on the asexual spectrum, including identities such as asexual (Miranda), demisexual (Desi), and quoiromantic (Jackie).
  • 2020, Erin Hampson, "Negotiating (in)visibility: A phenomenological analysis of asexual students' experiences of university", Psychology of Sexualities Review, Volume 11, Number 1, Summer 2020, page 29:
    Romantic orientations varied; two identifying as ‘biromantic’ (to be romantically attracted to the same and other genders), another as ‘aromantic’ or ‘quiro-romantic’ (a lack of, or uncertainty about their capacity for, romantic attraction) and the last described as ‘idemromantic’ (to not distinguish romantic and platonic attraction).