User:Roguish Knight/Novosexual

Novosexual people experience a change in their sexual orientation alongside a change in their gender identity. Novosexual people experience being both genderfluid and abrosexual at the same time, with both identities changing together.

Etymology
The prefix "novo-" comes from the Latin novo, which means "to make new, renew, revive; to change, alter; to invent."

History
The term novosexual was coined prior to July 10, 2014, by a tumblr user who went by the handle of "jacobsshinobu", who also created the original pride flag.

Flag
The original pride flag made by jacobsshinobu around 2014, was created with the following meanings to its colors:
 * White represents neutrality, or a time of neutral attraction; it includes bisexuality, pansexuality, and asexuality.
 * Pink represents attraction to girls, women, feminine people and feminine identities.
 * Blue represents attraction to boys, men, masculine people, and masculine identities.
 * The 6 other outer stripes represent all other orientations.
 * The rainbow heart represents the attraction spectrum.

On August 15, 2020, two redesigns of the novosexual flag were proposed by u/Buniny, also known as MoonJellyBuniny, on the r/novosexual subreddit. These designs were prompted by the fact that Buniny found the original "complicated and a bit garish." The flags have colors based on the genderfluid and abrosexual flags, with the following meanings:
 * Blue: Attraction and identification of masculinity.
 * Green: The link between sexual orientation and gender identity.
 * White: Lack of attraction or gender.
 * Pink: Attraction and identification of femininity.
 * Dark Purple: Attraction and identification of mixed genders or other non-binary identities, such as third gender.

Distinction
Novosexuality is distinct from abrosexuality. While they are both fluid sexualities, novosexuality is defined by the sexual orientation changing together with a fluid gender identity. This makes it different from being both abrosexual and genderfluid with sexualities and genders that change independently of each other.

Resources
Here you can place useful resources relevant for the described topic.