Illustrated by Erin Rommel and Sabrina Bezerra
What does it mean to be a woman? Many people on the internet say that it means having a certain set of genitals, arguing that gender is an innate set of characteristics we inherit from our bodies rather than an identity we are socialised into and can choose for ourselves.
Others say that to be a woman means having the shared experience of being oppressed by the patriarchy. At face value, that might sound fair enough, but certain women are selective in who they consider shares that experience. Historically, this has drawn a line around ‘womanhood’ to exclude Black, WOC, and transgender women.
The question, then, is really one of ownership: who gets to be a woman?
‘Womxn’, an alternative spelling to ‘woman/women’, was proposed as a way to reclaim the identity of womanhood as inclusive and intersectional, and not defined in relation to men. It has been pronounced as ‘wo-minx’ or simply in the same way as ‘woman/women’.

Where did the term come from?
‘Womxn’ was identified in writing in the 1970s, during the second wave feminist movement. It appeared alongside ‘womyn’, another alternative spelling for ‘woman/women’. Both forms sought to reclaim and express a more emancipated womanhood through removal of the ‘men/man’ at the end of each word.
“They wanted to liberate themselves from male forms and norms, to avoid the relationship with ‘man’,” says Dr. Cornelia Lahmann, psycholinguist and linguist at language learning app Babbel. “The ‘x’ form has only picked up in terms of attention in the last 10 years—this has a lot to do with current [social] movements.”
‘Womxn’ emerged as a term to explicitly signpost the inclusion of trans and WOC, as ‘womyn’ has been associated with trans-exclusionary radical feminism and white feminism.
How has the meaning of ‘womxn’ changed over time?
Language and how it is understood are constantly changing, both due to society’s shifting values and specific tensions between different groups of people.