Gender & Sexuality dictionary
androgyn
or androgyne [an-druh-jahyn] or [an-druh-jin]
What does androgyn mean?
Something that is an androgyn(ǰ androgyne) has both male and female characteristics. In biology, it’s used to describe plants and animals with both male and female sex traits. It’s also a popular identifier in the LGBTQ+ community for people who identify as both male and female.
In popular culture, the adjective androgynous describes something as unisex or sexually ambiguous, sometimes in an insulting manner.
Where does androgyn come from?

The concept of androgyn is ancient, notably found in the Greek myth of Hermaphroditus. A handsome fellow, Hermaphroditus caught the eye of a nymph, Salmacis. She was so enamored, she beseeched the gods to merge their bodies so they’d never be apart. The result was an entity both physically male and female — an androgyn, or something androgynous.
Androgyne is recorded in Old English while androgynous is evidenced in the 1600s. While many biologists have used androgyne/androgynous for such things as plants with both male and female sex characteristics, others have used the term over the years to deprecate men who seem too female and women who seem too male.
ԻDzis a more modern variant of androgyne. It was recorded in the early 1900s in medical texts highlighting people who displays both male and female biology. While historically framed in a medical context with negative implications, it has since evolved to have a more positive connotation.
In the 2000s, androgyn spread in the LGBTQ+ as a term for a person with a nonbinary gender expression. This use perhaps has some debt to gender-bending icons like David Bowie, the rock icon who notably adopted an androgynous, gender-fluid look in the 1970s. With the growing awareness and visibility of nonbinary individuals, androgyn/androgyne has been experiencing more use by trans people who identify as both (or not strictly) male and female in some manner, often in terms of appearance.
However, androgyny is still sometimes used as an insult in contemporary language to describe those who are seen as gender-ambiguous. An androgynous haircut may be seen as too effeminate or masculine, for instance.
Examples of androgyn

Who uses androgyn?
Androgyn, androgyne, androgynous, and androgyny — whatever the form, the word sees biological use for plants and animals that don’t have separate sexes. Did you know that many snails, for instance, are androgynous?
Known in France as "l'Androgyne du Desert," Eberhardt traveled North Africa at the turn of the century, dressed as a man. Her wild life transformed her into a legend.
— The Paris Review (@parisreview)
Note
This is not meant to be a formal definition of androgyn like most terms we define on Dictionary.com, but is rather an informal word summary that hopefully touches upon the key aspects of the meaning and usage of androgyn that will help our users expand their word mastery.