• 2SLGBTQI+ • GB – gay and bisexual. Typically referring to men attracted to men when about
male sexual orientation or where
gender modality is not addressed. • GBT or GBTQ – variant omitting "lesbian", typically when referring only to
men. • GLBT – Commonly used until the 1980s. The L was placed first in honor of lesbians who provided care and donated blood during the
AIDS Crisis, and LGBT became the dominant spelling. • HBTQ –
homosexual, bisexual, transgender, and queer. More common in Swedish. • LB – lesbian and bisexual. Typically referring to women attracted to women when about
female sexual orientation or where gender modality is not addressed. • LBT or LBTQ, – variant omitting "gay", typically when referring only to women. • LGB or GLB – lesbian, gay, and bisexual. In the 21st century, the term became associated with anti-trans groups such as
LGB Alliance and
#DropTheT. • LGBPA+ • LGBQ • LGBT • LGBT+ • LGBTA • LGBTH, with H for
HIV+ • LGBTI • LGBTIH, with H for
hijra • LGBTQI, LGBTIQ, LGBTQI+, or LGBTIQ+ • LGBTQIA or LGBTQIA+ • LGBTQIAP+, with P for pansexuality or panromantic • LGBTQIAPD+, with D for
demisexual and
demiromantic • LGBTQIAPK+, with K for
kink • LGBTQIAPN+ or LGBTIAPN+, with N for non-binary • , acronym for "lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, transsexual, queer, questioning,
flexual, asexual,
genderfuck,
polyamorous,
bondage/discipline,
dominance/submission,
sadism/masochism". The acronym was coined in the early 2000s by LGBTQ students at
Wesleyan University, including asexual activist
David Jay, who took credit for the inclusion of
FAG in the acronym. In 2015, the term's continued inclusion on a campus housing page from that period provoked backlash. with TTT standing for transgender,
transvestite (or
travesti), and
transsexual. • LGT, GLT, or GLTT – referring only to
monosexual and
monoromantic identities. More common in Brazil around the middle of 1990s. • LGTB or GLTB – more common in Spanish. • QUILTBAG, with U standing for undefined,
unlabeled, or unsure ==Alternatives to LGBTQ==