Sapphist - traducción al ruso
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Sapphist - traducción al ruso

WOMAN WITH SEXUAL AND/OR ROMANTIC ATTRACTION TO OTHER WOMEN
Lesbianism; Lesbians; Gay woman; Gay women; Gay female; Homosexual female; Homosexual women; Homosexual woman; Lesbo; Amor lesbicus; Lesban; Lesbian-identified; Lesbian women; Lesbian woman; Lesbiens; Lesbianity; Lesbefriends; Les be friends; Les be friend; Lesbefriend; Homosexuality, female; Lesbain; Gay girl; Lesbian sexuality; Lesbian life partner; Lesbains; Lesibianism; Female homosexuality; Lesbi; Homosexuality in Women; Lesbian relationship; Lesbian relationships; Female homosexual; Corerasty; Blue-ribbon bisexual; Blue-ribbon bisexuals; Her wife; Lesbians in ancient Greece; Lesbians in ancient Rome; Health status of lesbians
  • alt=An upside down black triangle.
  • alt=Still shot from the film "The Children's Hour", showing Shirley MacLaine looking down at the left and Audrey Hepburn to her right staring at her, in a bedroom. The words "Can an ugly rumor destroy what's beautiful?" obscure much of MacLaine's face.
  • alt=Reproduction of a German magazine cover with the title "Die Freundin" showing a nude woman sitting on a horse, looking behind her.
  • alt=
  • alt=A photograph of Ellen DeGeneres with her 1997 Emmy Award.
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  • alt=A publicity photo of a stout African American woman in white tuxedo with tails and top hat, carrying a cane and her signature in the lower right corner.
  • alt=Painting of a woman dressed in Greek robes sitting on a marble bench with trees and water in the distance.
  • alt=A front and back illustration of a Renaissance-era hermaphrodite showing a person with female facial features, breasts, and what appears to be a small penis or large clitoris. She wears a small hood and open robe tied multiple times around the legs. Where it opens in the front, the apparent rear appearance shows it to be perhaps a shell of some kind, as one with her body. Two squares are missing from her the back of her head and torso. She has no buttocks.
  • alt=A graph with seven columns labeled 0 to 6. The 0 column is "exclusively heterosexual" and is shown completely white. A gradient line showing the varying degrees of bisexual responses starts at the beginning of column 1 and rises to the end of column 5. Column 6 is "exclusively homosexual" and is shown filled with the color blue.
  • alt=
  • alt=A painting of two short-haired women in a massive bed, covered to their chins in blankets under a red top cover. One woman is looking sleepily at the other.
  • website=[[BBC News]]}}</ref>
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  • Attendees at 2012 New York City [[Pride parade]].
  • alt=An upside down pink triangle.
  • alt=Reproduction of a London newspaper, headline reading "A Book That Must Be Suppressed" and Radclyffe Hall's portrait: a woman wearing a suit jacket and bow tie with a black matching skirt. Her hair is slicked back, she wears no make-up, in one hand is a cigarette and her other hand is in her skirt pocket.
  • ''[[Sappho and Erinna in a Garden at Mytilene]]'' by [[Simeon Solomon]], 1864
  • alt=A drawn illustrated magazine cover of a woman in half shadow with short, wavy hair holding a harlequin mask under the title "The Ladder" and the date "October 1957" underneath it.
  • alt=An engraved drawing of Eleanor Butler and Sarah Ponsonby, known as the "Ladies of Llangollen". They are shown sitting in a private library wearing smoking jackets, with a cat in the foreground sitting in a chair.
  • alt=A brightly painted book cover with the title "The Third Sex", with a sultry blonde wearing a red outfit showing cleavage and midriff seated on a sofa, while a redhead with short hair places her hand on the blonde's shoulder and leans over her, also displaying cleavage wearing a white blouse with rolled-up sleeves.
  • alt=
  • alt=Two women assembling a section of a wing for a WWII fighter plane.
  • alt=Cover of Vanity Fair magazine from August 1993 showing k.d. lang reclining in a barber chair with eyes closed and holding a compact mirror. She has shaving foam on her chin and is wearing an open-collar white shirt, black and white striped tie, dark color pinstripe vest and cuffed pants, and black lace boots. Supermodel Cindy Crawford is holding a straight razor to lang's chin while lang's head rests on her breast. Crawford is wearing a one-piece black bathing suit and high heel black boots, with head thrown back as her long hair cascades down her back.
  • alt=Painting of a Renaissance-era woman dressed as a man, standing and looking away, as a woman dressed as a woman holds the other's hand to her breast, looking imploringly at the other, set against a bucolic backdrop.
  • alt=Black and white photo of two women sitting in a hammock in turn of the 20th century dresses; one reclines and the other sits on her lap and wraps her arm around the other, both staring at each other.

Sapphist      

['sæfist]

существительное

общая лексика

лесбиянка

Lesbian         
сущ.
лесбиянка; женщина, чьи эротические интересы направлены на представительницу своего пола.
Lesbianism         
сущ.
лесбийская любовь.

Definición

lesbian
¦ noun a homosexual woman.
¦ adjective relating to lesbians or lesbianism.
Derivatives
lesbianism noun
Origin
C19: via L. from Gk Lesbios, from Lesbos, Greek island and home of Sappho, who expressed affection for women in her poetry, + -ian.

Wikipedia

Lesbian

A lesbian is a homosexual woman or girl. The word is also used for women in relation to their sexual identity or sexual behavior, regardless of sexual orientation, or as an adjective to characterize or associate nouns with female homosexuality or same-sex attraction. The concept of "lesbian" to differentiate women with a shared sexual orientation evolved in the 20th century. Throughout history, women have not had the same freedom or independence as men to pursue homosexual relationships, but neither have they met the same harsh punishment as homosexual men in some societies. Instead, lesbian relationships have often been regarded as harmless, unless a participant attempts to assert privileges traditionally enjoyed by men. As a result, little in history was documented to give an accurate description of how female homosexuality was expressed. When early sexologists in the late 19th century began to categorize and describe homosexual behavior, hampered by a lack of knowledge about homosexuality or women's sexuality, they distinguished lesbians as women who did not adhere to female gender roles. They classified them as mentally ill—a designation which has been reversed since the late 20th century in the global scientific community.

Women in homosexual relationships in Europe and the United States responded to the discrimination and repression either by hiding their personal lives, or accepting the label of outcast and creating a subculture and identity. Following World War II, during a period of social repression when governments actively persecuted homosexuals, women developed networks to socialize with and educate each other. Gaining greater economic and social freedom allowed them to determine how they could form relationships and families. With second-wave feminism and the growth of scholarship in women's history and sexuality in the late 20th century, the definition of lesbian broadened, leading to debate about the term's use. While research by Lisa M. Diamond identified sexual desire as the core component for defining lesbians, some women who engage in same-sex sexual activity may reject not only identifying as lesbians but as bisexual as well. Other women's self-identification as lesbian may not align with their sexual orientation or sexual behavior. Sexual identity is not necessarily the same as one's sexual orientation or sexual behavior, due to various reasons, such as the fear of identifying their sexual orientation in a homophobic setting.

Portrayals of lesbians in the media suggest that society at large has been simultaneously intrigued and threatened by women who challenge feminine gender roles, as well as fascinated and appalled with women who are romantically involved with other women. Women who adopt a lesbian identity share experiences that form an outlook similar to an ethnic identity: as homosexuals, they are unified by the heterosexist discrimination and potential rejection they face from their families, friends, and others as a result of homophobia. As women, they face concerns separate from men. Lesbians may encounter distinct physical or mental health concerns arising from discrimination, prejudice, and minority stress. Political conditions and social attitudes also affect the formation of lesbian relationships and families in the open.

¿Cómo se dice Sapphist en Ruso? Traducción de &#39Sapphist&#39 al Ruso