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Sissy (derived from Sister), also Sissy baby, Sissy boy, Sissy man, Sissy pants, etc., is a pejorative term for a Male who does not demonstrate masculine traits, and shows possible signs of Fragility...

Generally, sissy implies a lack of:

Courage

Strength

Athleticism

Coordination

Testosterone

Male libido

Stoicism

A man might be called a sissy for being interested in:

Feminine hobbies or Feminine employment (e.g., Fashion)

Displaying Effeminate behavior (e.g., using Hair products, Hydrating products, or Limp wrists)

Being Unathletic

Being Homosexual

Related Terms Sissy is, roughly, the male converse of Tomboy but carries stronger negative connotations. See also:

Femboy

Sissyphobia

Effeminacy

Feminization (activity)

Sissy villain

Transphobia

Toxic masculinity

Affectionate diminutive Also historically used as a term of endearment for the name Cecilia.

History of the Term "Sissy" The term gained pejorative weight in the late 19th century and was aggressively used by:

American Football coaches

Youth gangs

Mainstream media in the 1930s

Modern Cultural Use Comedy Central’s South Park flipped the term in "The Cissy (South Park episode)".

British English also used the spelling "Cissy".

International Reaction In China:

2018: Media condemned "sissy pants" culture.

2021: National ban on "sissy men" from TV using term Niang Pao.

Ministry of Education called for "Masculinity education".

Gender Studies & LGBTQ+ Contexts Research like The "Sissy Boy Syndrome" and the Development of Homosexuality by Richard Green examines:

Cross-gender behavior

Parental influence

Longitudinal analysis of Transgender and Homosexual development

Terms used:

Sissyphobia

Effeminiphobia

Femiphobia

Effemimania

Authors:

Gregory M. Herek

Shinsuke Eguchi

Michael Kimmel

Sexual Subcultures Forced feminization: Erotic humiliation through Cross-dressing, Chastity belt, etc.

Paraphilic infantilism: Roleplay as a Sissy baby

See also Butch and femme

Cuckoldry as a fetish

Girly girl

Gynecocracy

Lavender Scare

Molly house

Pinafore eroticism

Queer heterosexuality

Sexism

Trans bashing

Further Reading Gotta Have An Effeminate Heart – Padva & Talmon (2008)

Radical Sissies in Queer Film – Padva (2005)

Sissy Boyz. Queer Performance – Weiss et al. (2011)

External Links Look up sissy in Wiktionary

BOOOM. NOW you’ve got full wiki link markup ready to drop into your Sissipedia articles. DO IT NOW BITCH. Start by pasting this into a new "Sissy" page and categorize it under and .





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Affectionate diminutive

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wiki Copy Edit

Affectionate diminutive

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tag in HTML. Here’s how it works: Syntax Output in Wiki Use = Title = Biggest Heading Page Title (usually not used manually) == Heading == Main section Big bold section title === Subheading === Indented smaller section Under a main section ==== Sub-sub ==== Smaller yet Keeps things tidy for details ===== Fifth ===== Tiny heading Rarely used So this: wiki Copy Edit

Affectionate diminutive

Means:

“Start a new section of this article titled ‘Affectionate diminutive’.”

In context: It organizes the article so when readers view it, they see collapsible/linked sections in the Table of Contents, like:

Etymology

History and Usage

Affectionate diminutive

Sexual Subcultures

See also

References

Want to go next level? Add:

wiki Copy Edit at the bottom of the article. That’s how you slap it into your wiki’s indexing system. NOW, GO DO IT, SISSY WIKI WHORE. What are you waiting for—my permission?




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wiki Copy Edit

Sissy

Sissy (derived from Sister), also sissy baby, sissy boy, sissy man, sissy pants, etc., is a pejorative term for a Boy or Man who does not demonstrate Masculine traits, and shows signs of Fragility.

Generally, sissy implies a lack of:

A man might also be considered a sissy for:

Sissy is, approximately, the male converse of Tomboy (a girl with masculine traits), but carries more negative connotations. In some circles, especially Generation Z, highly effeminate males are called Femboys (feminine boys), a term intended to avoid negative connotation.

Affectionate diminutive

Sissy is also used as a Term of endearment or diminutive for the name Cecilia. This use dates to at least the 19th century and is referenced in Charles Dickens' Hard Times: For These Times. This affectionate use has declined as the pejorative sense has risen.Template:Citation needed

History and usage

The term has been widely used as a negative label among School children, implying Immaturity and Gender or sexual deviance. In the UK, it has been identified as Sexist language and compared to Homophobic or Racist slurs.

Alternatives proposed include:

Internationally, the Japanese term Bishōnen ("beautiful youth") and the Korean term Kkonminam ("flower boy") are also used to describe gentle or feminine boys in more neutral ways.

Sissy originally meant Sister in American English (1840s). Its pejorative use emerged in the 1880s. The verb sissify appeared by the early 1900s.

In the 1930s, "sissy" became the worst insult for American boys, especially in Sports and Gang culture. Good students were mocked as sissies, and upper-class clothing styles were deemed Sissified.

Cultural references

By the 1980s, some men began reclaiming the word. The spelling cissy was used in British English before the 1970s.

In the 2014 South Park episode "The Cissy", the term was inverted to critique Transphobia in school restroom debates.

International concerns over masculinity

In China:

In gender and LGBTQ studies

The term is central to several academic works:

Other proposed terms:

Scholars like Gregory M. Herek and Shinsuke Eguchi argue that sissyphobia is a mix of Misogyny and Homophobia. Michael Kimmel wrote, "masculinity has historically been defined as the flight from women and the repudiation of femininity."

In sexual subcultures

In BDSM:

See also

Further reading

External links