ChatterBank0 min ago
What's the word?
1) Is there a word in the english language to describe a parent who's child has died, ie in the reverse case of an orphan? We have the words widow and widower; so could it be an orphaner?
2) I know there is a word for this one but I can't remember it. Someone who appears to be of neutral gender (difficult to tell if boy or girl.) All i can think of is ambidexterous. I know that's someone who favours both sides of the brain equally; but I'm sure the word I'm looking for is from a similar root.
Thank you
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by l_h_kings. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Of course hermaphrodite is a perfectly good word, and still in use, but it doesn't describe someone of neutral gender (as in the question), rather someone of both sexes. Intersex doesn't really describe someone of neutral gender either, it's more a term for ambiguous-looking sex organs. There are, I believe, very few true hermaphrodites (in humans that is!) but a far larger number of intersex babies are born, so intersex has a different referential meaning to hermaphrodite.
I think that androgynous is probably the the word I_h_kings is looking for: it does sound a (little) bit like ambidexterous!