Looks like a man


She looks like a man in a dress. She's so tall and masculine-looking. Even the facial structure is kinda manly. Even her teeth... Like, in her pictures, she has the sort of teeth I'd expect a guy to have. I haven't heard her speak, but I imagine a deep voice.

She's probably real nice, and I haven't seen anything she's been in to judge how good of an actor she is, but that doesn't change that she looks like a man.

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Posted on another sites forum:

Gender and biological sex are two different things even though technically, the definition of gender, allows for it to be defined by biological sex. However, by definition, biological sex can not be defined by gender.
Unlike biological sex (sex), gender can not be known with absolute certainty until the person in question, expresses, verbally or otherwise, their gender. This is due to the fact that gender is of the mind. It is what one feels and thinks within their mind. Beyond that, there are currently no medical science data sets that conclusively say otherwise. On the other hand, biological sex can be scientifically determined.

It’s important to first understand that biological sex is a term that was created for the specific purpose of distinguishing between two types/two groups of human beings, including transgender people, nearly all (99% or greater) human beings belong to one of the two groups:

Males - Those with XY chromosomes, male primary sex and reproductive organs, male secondary sex characteristics and the ability to seed a female.

Female - Those with XX chromosomes, female primary sex and reproductive organs, female secondary sex characteristics and the ability to become pregnant and give birth.

By definition, a transgender woman is a woman by way of her gender and a biological male by way of biological sex. It is not yet possible to change a persons biological sex. Nearly all transgender women (and men), are not people with an intersex/kiplinger's syndrome/condition, etc. The definition of transgender is that the biological sex does not match the gender identity. There are 2 biological sexes along with some members of the medical sciences community now believing that there is a 3rd biological sex; intersex, which is a combination of the first two biological sexes.

A transgender woman wanting to become more like a biological female (aka a natal woman, cisgender woman or genetic woman), can do all or some of the following:

HRT (hormone replacement therapy) in order to gain female secondary sex characteristics (develop breasts, body hair growth reduction).

SRS (sex reassignment surgery) which in it’s most drastic form can result in a transgender woman, having her penis surgically removed and transformed into what is known as a neo vagina.

Neither HRT nor SRS can transform a person from biological male to biological female.
In the U.S. there are less than 1 million transgender men and women. 2/3’s of transgender people do not undergo SRS, thus they retain their penis/vagina.

Less than 10% of biological women in the U.S. are not able to give birth due to any one or more of several reasons. Excluding intersex people who may consider themselves transgender; all transgender women are not able to give birth because they do not have female primary and reproductive sex organs and SRS can not give them said organs.

Most transgender women do not start HRT until after puberty. The means that some of the masculinizing that HRT could prevent, are not achieved, resulting in a transgender who becomes an adult, retaining more of the natural physical appearance of a biological male. This includes masculine facial bone structure, larger hands, broad shoulders and masculine hip bones. These are the reasons why, more often than not, transgender women, have the appearance of transgender women.

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