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![]() Kathoeys on the stage of a cabaret show in Pattaya | |||||
Pronunciation | [kàtʰɤːj] | ||||
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Meaning | Trans women, androgynous people, effeminate gay men | ||||
Classification | Gender expression | ||||
Other terms | |||||
Synonyms | Ladyboy, phuying praphet song, phet thi sam, sao praphet song | ||||
Associated terms | Bakla, Khanith, Kothi, Hijra, Two-spirit, Trans woman, Akava'ine | ||||
Demographics | |||||
Frequency | up to 0.6% male (2011 estimate)[citation needed] | ||||
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Legal information | |||||
Recognition | Yes, limited | ||||
Protection | None |
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Transgender topics |
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Kathoey or katoey (Khmer: ខ្ទើយ, khtəəy; Lao: ກະເທີຍ, ka thœ̄i, Lao pronunciation: [kàtʰɤːj]; Thai: กะเทย; RTGS: kathoei, Thai pronunciation: [kàtʰɤːj]), commonly translated as ladyboys in English, is a term used by some people in Cambodia, Laos, and Thailand, whose identities in English may be best described as transgender women in some cases, or effeminate gay men in other cases. These people are not traditionally transgender, but are seen as a third gender. Transgender women in Thailand mostly use terms other than kathoey when referring to themselves, such as phuying (Thai: ผู้หญิง, 'woman'). A significant number of Thai people perceive kathoey as belonging to a separate gender, including some transgender women themselves.[1][vague]
In the face of the many sociopolitical obstacles that kathoeys navigate in Thailand, kathoey activism has led to constitutional protection from unjust gender discrimination as of January 2015, but a separate third gender category has not yet been legally recognized.[2]
Yeung-2017
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