Gender Wiki
Caedogender

Caedogender Flag

Alt Caedogender

Alternate Caedogender Flag by RayDude

Caedogender alt

Alternate Caedogender Flag by ariagreytempest

Caedogender or caedgender is a gender identity where one's gender has been “cut away” by a traumatic event or gender that was once felt but has been damaged or lost due to trauma. Caedogender individuals might also identity as affectugender or neurogender.

Caedgender flag

Alternate Caedogender flag

Caedogirl

Caedogirl Flag by Pride-Flags

Caedoboy

Caedoboy Flag by ItsBug13

Caedononbinary

Caedononbinary Flag by ItsBug13

Caedovoid

Caedovoid Flag by the nope system

”Caedo-” can be used as a prefix to the gender that was previously felt, such as in caedogirl and caedoboy.

Caedogender is similar to traumatagender.

History[]

Caedogender was coined at some point before the 4th of September, 2015. It is unknown who coined it, or exactly when it was coined.

Subsets[]

Caedogirl[]

Caedogirl is a subset of caedogender in which the gender one felt before it was cut away by trauma was female.

Caedoboy[]

Caedoboy is a subset of caedogender in which the gender one felt before it was cut away by trauma was male.

Caedononbinary[]

Caedononbinary is a subset of caedogender in which the gender one felt before it was cut away by trauma was non-binary.

Caedovoid[]

Caedovoid is a subset of caedogender in which the gender one felt before it was cut away by trauma was gendervoid.

Flags[]

The original caedogender flag was created by DeviantArt user Pride-Flags on the 4th of September, 2015.[1] The caedogirl flag was also created by Pride-Flags.

The caedoboy and caedononbinary flags were created by FANDOM user ItsBug13 on the 11th of April, 2021.[2]

An alternate caedogender flag was created by FANDOM user RayDude, on the 28th of April, 2021, based on the cisgender flag.[3]

Another alternate caedogender flag was created on April 9, 2022, by Instagram user ariagreytempest.[4]

The caedovoid flag was created by the nope system on Discord, on the 6th of August, 2021.

References[]

See Also[]