Cambridge Dictionary’s Definition of ‘Woman’ Now Includes Transgender Women

For the longest time, “An adult female human being” was the standard definition of ‘woman’ by Cambridge Dictionary. This denotes how women were solely described by their biological disposition. Yet, after careful study, the Cambridge Dictionary spokesperson expressed that the descriptors for the word ‘woman’ need to be updated.

In addition to the longtime definition, Cambridge Dictionary now defines ‘woman’ as, “an adult who lives and identifies as female though they may have been said to have a different sex at birth.”  For the new entry’s usage, Cambridge provided examples such as, “She was the first trans woman elected to a national office,” and, “Mary is a woman who was assigned male at birth.”

The spokesperson elaborated that definitions go forward with time, “Our dictionaries are written for learners of English and are designed to help users understand English as it is currently used."

Along with this, Cambridge also expands its definition for the word ‘man’ that is now inclusive of transgender men having the descriptor, “an adult who lives and identifies as male though they may have been said to have a different sex at birth.” The dictionary also provides new examples: “Mark is a trans man (= a man who was said to be female when they were born)” and “Their doctor encouraged them to live as a man for a while before undergoing surgical transition”.

Dictionary.com, who named ‘woman’ as its word of the year, points out the significance of descriptors provided to a word especially those that seem ambiguous and controversial. “This year, the search for the word woman on Dictionary.com spiked significantly multiple times in relation to separate high-profile events, including the moment when a question about the very definition of the word was posed on the national stage,” the online reference site elaborated.

This pertains to the confirmation hearing of Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson where she was asked by Republican Sen. Marsha Blackburn to “provide a definition for the word ‘woman’”. 

Global FWN100™ 2021 Lucy Reyes Pushes for Easier Credentialing Process for the Filipino Nurses in Canada

Lucy Reyes, President of Philippine Canadian Nurses Association and Global FWN100™ 2021 Awardee, has recently been recognized in an article published by CBC News for founding an organization that pushes for an easier process for International Educated Nurses (IENs) to have their credentials acknowledged in Canada.

Reyes identifies the systemic difficulty of becoming a nurse in Canada when one has been trained abroad. The process, as she says in the interview with CBC News, takes an average of four years for IENs to get accredited in Canada. This is apart from a demanding list of requirements that IENs must accomplish within a time period.

As she says, “The credentialing of internationally educated nurses needs a post-implementation review very badly in order to transform the process and make it more realistic to actually help with our manpower crunch across the country.”

Photo Credit: Philippine Canadian Nurses Association

The system has not changed since Reyes completed her nursing degree 46 years ago. She founded the Philippine Canadian Nurses Association, which has been actively calling out this systemic problem—and reaching out to help IENs experience fair labor opportunities in Canada.

"What I'm pushing for is … an opportunity for the provincial regulatory bodies to actually meet and develop common standards because we have the same recipients of care,” Reyes highlights.

Lucy has contributed more than four decades of progressive and diverse experience in acute and ambulatory settings as a frontline clinical manager, health informatics specialist, and as project management leader to several organizational initiatives. The Foundation for the Filipina Women’s Network conferred Reyes the Most Influential Filipina Woman in the World Award (Global FWN100™) Innovators & Thought Leaders category, at the Global Filipina Leadership Summit in San Francisco in 2021

 

 

29 MAY: The Vagina Monologues: Asian Women Speak Out Against Hate

 

FWN AGAINST HATE • SAN FRANCISCO 2022

The Vagina Monologues

Sunday, May 29 • 7:00 pm

Herbst Theatre 401 Van Ness
San Francisco, USA
 

14 YEARS

Since 2003, FWN has collaborated with V-DAY, empowering and celebrating women and their sexuality with a festival of theatre, comedy, and the spoken word, highlighted at benefit performances in San Francisco, New York, Las Vegas, Washington, DC., Toronto, Canada and London UK.

ASIAN WOMEN SPEAK OUT AGAINST HATE

“We perform this play as an all Asian cast to raise awareness of the violence against all women and girls and the hate that, we, as Asian women face.”

- Marily Mondejar, Executive Producer, The Vagina Monologues


TICKET INFORMATION:

$38 - General Admission
$150 - VIP (Box and Center Orchestra)

VIP Reserved Seating includes After Party Invitation

10% discount for 10 tickets or more