forbidden word: QT (Queer / Trans) (Queer / Transgender)
This is one of the terms you can’t say in the Trump Regime. See a comprehensive list at the Forbidden Words Project.
queer
queer, adj
-
strange or odd from a conventional viewpoint; unusually different; singular.
The court has a queer notion of justice.
- Synonyms:
- weird, eccentric, freakish, curious, unconventional
- Antonyms:
- ordinary
-
a.Sometimes Disparaging and Offensive. (of a person) gay or lesbian.
b. noting or relating to a sexual orientation or gender identity that falls outside the heterosexual mainstream or the gender binary. -
of a questionable nature or character; suspicious; shady.
Something queer about the language of the prospectus kept investors away.
-
not feeling physically right or well; giddy, faint, or qualmish.
If you feel queer, you should lie down for a bit.
-
mentally unbalanced or deranged.
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Slang. bad, worthless, or counterfeit.
queer, verb (used with object)
-
to put (a person) in a hopeless or disadvantageous situation as to success, favor, etc.
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to jeopardize.
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to interpret, analyze, or reconstruct (a narrative) based on the perspectives of people whose experiences fall outside normative ideas of gender and sexuality, especially in academic research and criticism: Her pioneering research queered the portrayal of medical professionals by emphasizing the work of LGBTQ+ doctors.
This film queers the Western genre by introducing a transgender lead.
Her pioneering research queered the portrayal of medical professionals by emphasizing the work of LGBTQ+ doctors.
-
Often Disparaging and Offensive. (The noun “a queer” is often used with disparaging intent and considered offensive even among those who approve of the corresponding adjective “queer.” The plural “queers” is less likely to offend than the singular “a queer.”)
-
a gay or lesbian person.
-
a person whose sexual orientation or gender identity falls outside the heterosexual mainstream or the gender binary.
-
-
Slang. counterfeit money.
idioms
queer the pitch, to spoil the chances of success.
Sensitive Note
Historically, queer has meant “strange” in a way that departs from convention. Since the early 20th century, it has also had the meaning “gay or lesbian,” and for much of the time has been used with disparaging intent and perceived as insulting. Since the 1980s, queer has increasingly been adopted especially among younger members of the gay and lesbian community as a positive term of self-reference. However, the term is not universally accepted within the LGBT community, and might still be viewed by some as degrading. Queer is also a term used by activists and academics: queer politics; scholars of queer literature. The term has more recently come to include any person whose sexuality or gender identity falls outside the heterosexual norm or the gender binary. A person identifying as queer can be gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, genderqueer, gender-fluid, etc., and the use of queer allows for the expression of LGBTQ community membership without requiring any specific label. More broadly, within academia, “to queer” can even refer to the act of interpreting a text using any non-normative or marginalized perspective. This sense plays with the dual meaning of queer as referring to people whose genders and sexualities have been marginalized, and as referring to something that is unusual or unconventional. In this sense, introducing the perspectives of people of color or people with disabilities would also be considered queering a text in literary or cultural criticism.
Usage
What does queer mean? While queer has historically meant “strange” or “odd,” the word is more often used as a slur against—but also since reclaimed as a self-identifier—for non-heterosexual or non-cisgender people. Content warning: this article contains offensive and sensitive content.
Synonym Usage
See strange.
Other Word Forms
Derived Forms
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queerness, noun
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queerish, adjective
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queerly, adverb
Inflected Forms
Nouns
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queers, plural
Adjectives
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queerer, comparative
-
queerest, superlative
from — Definition of queer. (n.d.). In dictionary.com.
~ ~ ~
transgender
transgender, adjective
-
noting or relating to a person whose gender identity does not correspond to that person’s sex assigned at birth: She identifies as transgender.
The organization supports transgender rights.
She identifies as transgender. -
noting or relating to a person who does not conform to societal gender norms or roles.
noun
Usually Offensive., a person who is transgender.
Sensitive Note
The term transgender has largely replaced the older term transsexual, which is now considered outdated, though some people within the community continue to identify with the word transsexual, especially older people. Transgender is a less clinical term, referring more to gender identity and gender expression than to physical sex characteristics or sexual orientation. It is also a more general and inclusive term: a transgender person may be nonbinary, gender-fluid, genderqueer, third gender, etc. Use of transgender as a noun (One of my colleagues is a transgender ) is declining and is usually taken as offensive. And many people object to the adjectival variant transgendered (One of my colleagues is transgendered ) because the –ed suffix seems to imply that something happened to make the person transgender. See also trans, transsexual.
Word History and Origins
Origin of transgender1
First recorded in 1970–75; trans- + gender 1
Other Word Forms
- transgendered adjective
Compare Meanings
How does transgender compare to similar and commonly confused words? Explore the most common comparisons:
from — Dictionary.com | Meanings & Definitions of English Words. (2025d). In Dictionary.com.
July 1st, 2026
Flagstaff, Arizona
This is one of the words/ phrases you can’t say in the new Trump Regime. See a comprehensive list at the Forbidden Words Project.
image: his beautiful majesty © Holly Troy 7.2026
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