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**Likewise, Scalecomander Cindrethresh is introduced using She/Her pronouns (And since Dracthyr in their natural form lack any visible sexual dimorphism that's the only way to tell), only to take a masculine visage.
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* ''TabletopGame/MageTheAwakening'' had the concept of [[IKnowYourTrueName True Names]] in First Edition, which is why most mages used Shadow Names when dealing with one another to avoid getting sniped by sympathetic magic. Second Edition, however, refines True Names to "Sympathetic Names," which is the name that imprints on you based on everyday use and is ''not'' necessarily the one on your birth certificate; Shadow Names, on the other hand, involve a direct draw upon the Supernal Realms. The devs have gone so far as to say that [[EvenEvilHasStandards even the Seers of the Throne]] are unlikely to try deadnaming rival trans mages, because it has no value beyond shitty psyops.
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* ''Fanfic/VowOfNudity'': When Kay'la (a MtF sea elf) gets her gender flipped by a cursed spear, it turns her into a man.

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* ''Fanfic/VowOfNudity'': When Kay'la (a MtF [=MtF=] sea elf) gets her gender flipped by a cursed spear, it turns her into a man.
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* ''Fanfic/VowOfNudity'': When Kay'la (a MtF sea elf) gets her gender flipped by a cursed spear, it turns her into a man.
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* ''Series/ThePower2023'': The show goes both ways on this. On the one hand, a male-identifying character develops the organ that allows women to project electricity because he's intersex. On the other hand, a trans woman taking estrogen develops the same organ.
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* The comic book version of ''Literature/SleepingBeauties'' makes it clear that the sleeping plague that affects women also affects trans women, whereas trans men are entirely unaffected.
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* OlderThanPrint: ''[[https://getd.libs.uga.edu/pdfs/abbouchi_mounawar_201508_ma.pdf Ydé and Olive]]'', a 13th-century ''chanson de geste'', Ydé is a princess who escapes from [[IncestantAdmirer incestuous harassment by the king]] and goes on the road as a warrior, [[SweetPollyOliver adopting a male persona]] that becomes more and more a part of his identity. He eventually participates in the defense of Rome and is rewarded with the hand of the daughter of the local ruler. He confides in her and she accepts him and keeps his secret, but they are overheard, and the ruler finds out and determines to have him killed. At the last moment when he is about to be exposed to everyone and executed, an angel appears, reveals that his sex has been physically changed, blesses his union with Olive, and is implied to condemn to death the ruler who threatened him. Ydé and Olive go on to conceive a child and live HappilyEverAfter.
* The 14th​ century ''Tristan de Nanteuil'' has Blanchandine, a "Saracen" princess and the titular Tristan's wife after she converted to UsefulNotes/{{Christianity}}. After her husband goes missing and is presumed dead, Blanchandine goes in hiding from her father, and disguises herself as a knight known as [[LazyAlias Blanchandin]]. The daughter of the sultan and her first cousin once removed, Clarinde, [[KissingCousins falls in love]] with "Blanchandin," and decides to marry "him" once she ascends the throne as the [[SheIsTheKing new sultan]]. Blanchandine eventually relents after trying to stall by refusing to marry until Clarinde converts, but on their wedding night, a large [[TheMarvelousDeer stag]] enters the palace and Blanchandine gives chase into the woods, praying to God and UsefulNotes/TheVirginMary, and, just like Yde, an angel appears and informs her that UsefulNotes/{{Jesus}} is giving her the choice on whether to stay a woman or become a man, which she does, in order to avenge Tristan's death and so that no other man can sleep with her. From then on, the story switches to masculine pronouns and constantly calls him Blanchandin. Him and Clarinde have a son together, and when Tristan is revealed to be alive, he becomes his former husband's knightly brother-in-arms.

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* OlderThanPrint: ''[[https://getd.libs.uga.edu/pdfs/abbouchi_mounawar_201508_ma.pdf Ydé and Olive]]'', a 13th-century French ''chanson de geste'', Ydé is a princess who escapes from [[IncestantAdmirer incestuous harassment by the king]] and goes on the road as a warrior, [[SweetPollyOliver adopting a male persona]] that becomes more and more a part of his identity. He eventually participates in the defense of Rome and is rewarded with the hand of the daughter of the local ruler. He confides in her and she accepts him and keeps his secret, but they are overheard, and the ruler finds out and determines to have him killed. At the last moment when he is about to be exposed to everyone and executed, an angel appears, reveals that his sex has been physically changed, blesses his union with Olive, and is implied to condemn to death the ruler who threatened him. Ydé and Olive go on to conceive a child and live HappilyEverAfter.
* The 14th​ century French ''Tristan de Nanteuil'' has Blanchandine, a "Saracen" princess and the titular Tristan's wife after she converted to UsefulNotes/{{Christianity}}. After her husband goes missing and is presumed dead, Blanchandine goes in hiding from her father, and disguises herself as a knight known as [[LazyAlias Blanchandin]]. The daughter of the sultan and her first cousin once removed, Clarinde, [[KissingCousins falls in love]] with "Blanchandin," and decides to marry "him" once she ascends the throne as the [[SheIsTheKing new sultan]]. Blanchandine eventually relents after trying to stall by refusing to marry until Clarinde converts, but on their wedding night, a large [[TheMarvelousDeer stag]] enters the palace and Blanchandine gives chase into the woods, praying to God and UsefulNotes/TheVirginMary, and, just like Yde, an angel appears and informs her that UsefulNotes/{{Jesus}} is giving her the choice on whether to stay a woman or become a man, which she does, in order to avenge Tristan's death and so that no other man can sleep with her. From then on, the story switches to masculine pronouns and constantly calls him Blanchandin. Him and Clarinde have a son together, and when Tristan is revealed to be alive, he becomes his former husband's knightly brother-in-arms.

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[[folder:Web Original]]
* [[https://microsff.tumblr.com/ Micro SF/F stories]] has a few shorts with this premise. [[https://twitter.com/MicroSFF/status/1689393479883825152 For example]]:
-->When I gathered the courage to tell my mother that I was her daughter, not her son, she simply said:\\
"I have suspected so, ever since you were born."\\
"Why?"\\
"I was cursed when expecting you. A demon would take my firstborn son."\\
"And?"\\
"It came, looked at you and said 'Nah'."
[[/folder]]



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* This is OlderThanTelevision (at a bare minimum). [[https://www.publicmedievalist.com/tg-fairy-tale/ The Romanian folktale "The Girl Who Pretended to Be a Boy"]] (adapted by Jules Brun in the French anthology ''Seven Romanian Tales'' in 1894, then translated and adapted to English by Leonora Blanche Alleyne and Andrew Lang in their 1901 anthology ''The Violet Fairy Book'') describes how, needing to give his conqueror a "son" to serve as a knight, a conquered king who had only daughters sent them instead, requiring them to dress and act as men. His youngest, Fet-Fruners, took to it with aplomb and went on a series of daring quests. Then one day a quest put her in conflict with a hermit guarding a church from which she stole some holy water, who prayed that she be cursed with a GenderBender. [[{{Unishment}} The prince(ss) is overjoyed]] and the narrative switches to using masculine pronouns for Fet-Fruners almost immediately, and in short order he overthrows the evil emperor, marries a noblewoman he rescued earlier in the story, and lives HappilyEverAfter.
* Even farther back there are OlderThanPrint examples:
** In ''[[https://getd.libs.uga.edu/pdfs/abbouchi_mounawar_201508_ma.pdf Ydé and Olive]]'', a 13th-century ''chanson de geste'', Ydé is a princess who escapes from [[IncestantAdmirer incestuous harassment by the king]] and goes on the road as a warrior, [[SweetPollyOliver adopting a male persona]] that becomes more and more a part of his identity. He eventually participates in the defense of Rome and is rewarded with the hand of the daughter of the local ruler. He confides in her and she accepts him and keeps his secret, but they are overheard, and the ruler finds out and determines to have him killed. At the last moment when he is about to be exposed to everyone and executed, an angel appears, reveals that his sex has been physically changed, blesses his union with Olive, and is implied to condemn to death the ruler who threatened him. Ydé and Olive go on to conceive a child and live HappilyEverAfter.
** There is also the 14th​ century ''Tristan de Nanteuil'', in which the subject is Blanchandine, a "Saracen" princess and the titular Tristan's wife after she converted to UsefulNotes/{{Christianity}}. After her husband goes missing and is presumed dead, Blanchandine goes in hiding from her father, and disguises herself as a knight known as [[LazyAlias Blanchandin]]. The daughter of the sultan and her first cousin once removed, Clarinde, [[KissingCousins falls in love]] with "Blanchandin," and decides to marry "him" once she ascends the throne as the [[SheIsTheKing new sultan]]. Blanchandine eventually relents after trying to stall by refusing to marry until Clarinde converts, but on their wedding night, a large [[TheMarvelousDeer stag]] enters the palace and Blanchandine gives chase into the woods, praying to God and UsefulNotes/TheVirginMary, and, just like Yde, an angel appears and informs her that UsefulNotes/{{Jesus}} is giving her the choice on whether to stay a woman or become a man, which she does, in order to avenge Tristan's death and so that no other man can sleep with her. From then on, the story switches to masculine pronouns and constantly calls him Blanchandin. Him and Clarinde have a son together, and when Tristan is revealed to be alive, he becomes his former husband's knightly brother-in-arms.

to:

* This is OlderThanTelevision (at a bare minimum). [[https://www.publicmedievalist.com/tg-fairy-tale/ The Romanian folktale "The Girl Who Pretended to Be a Boy"]] (adapted by Jules Brun in the French anthology ''Seven Romanian Tales'' in 1894, then translated and adapted to English by Leonora Blanche Alleyne and Andrew Lang in their 1901 anthology ''The Violet Fairy Book'') describes how, needing to give his conqueror a "son" to serve as a knight, a conquered king who had only daughters sent them instead, requiring them to dress and act as men. His youngest, Fet-Fruners, took to it with aplomb and went on a series of daring quests. Then one day a quest put her in conflict with a hermit guarding a church from which she stole some holy water, who prayed that she be cursed with a GenderBender. [[{{Unishment}} The prince(ss) is overjoyed]] and the narrative switches to using masculine pronouns for Fet-Fruners almost immediately, and in short order he overthrows the evil emperor, marries a noblewoman he rescued earlier in the story, and lives HappilyEverAfter.
* Even farther back there are OlderThanPrint examples:
** In
OlderThanPrint: ''[[https://getd.libs.uga.edu/pdfs/abbouchi_mounawar_201508_ma.pdf Ydé and Olive]]'', a 13th-century ''chanson de geste'', Ydé is a princess who escapes from [[IncestantAdmirer incestuous harassment by the king]] and goes on the road as a warrior, [[SweetPollyOliver adopting a male persona]] that becomes more and more a part of his identity. He eventually participates in the defense of Rome and is rewarded with the hand of the daughter of the local ruler. He confides in her and she accepts him and keeps his secret, but they are overheard, and the ruler finds out and determines to have him killed. At the last moment when he is about to be exposed to everyone and executed, an angel appears, reveals that his sex has been physically changed, blesses his union with Olive, and is implied to condemn to death the ruler who threatened him. Ydé and Olive go on to conceive a child and live HappilyEverAfter.
** There is also the * The 14th​ century ''Tristan de Nanteuil'', in which the subject is Nanteuil'' has Blanchandine, a "Saracen" princess and the titular Tristan's wife after she converted to UsefulNotes/{{Christianity}}. After her husband goes missing and is presumed dead, Blanchandine goes in hiding from her father, and disguises herself as a knight known as [[LazyAlias Blanchandin]]. The daughter of the sultan and her first cousin once removed, Clarinde, [[KissingCousins falls in love]] with "Blanchandin," and decides to marry "him" once she ascends the throne as the [[SheIsTheKing new sultan]]. Blanchandine eventually relents after trying to stall by refusing to marry until Clarinde converts, but on their wedding night, a large [[TheMarvelousDeer stag]] enters the palace and Blanchandine gives chase into the woods, praying to God and UsefulNotes/TheVirginMary, and, just like Yde, an angel appears and informs her that UsefulNotes/{{Jesus}} is giving her the choice on whether to stay a woman or become a man, which she does, in order to avenge Tristan's death and so that no other man can sleep with her. From then on, the story switches to masculine pronouns and constantly calls him Blanchandin. Him and Clarinde have a son together, and when Tristan is revealed to be alive, he becomes his former husband's knightly brother-in-arms.brother-in-arms.
* [[https://www.publicmedievalist.com/tg-fairy-tale/ The Romanian folktale "The Girl Who Pretended to Be a Boy"]] (adapted by Jules Brun in the French anthology ''Seven Romanian Tales'' in 1894, then translated and adapted to English by Leonora Blanche Alleyne and Andrew Lang in their 1901 anthology ''The Violet Fairy Book'') describes how, needing to give his conqueror a "son" to serve as a knight, a conquered king who had only daughters sent them instead, requiring them to dress and act as men. His youngest, Fet-Fruners, took to it with aplomb and went on a series of daring quests. Then one day a quest put her in conflict with a hermit guarding a church from which she stole some holy water, who prayed that she be cursed with a GenderBender. [[{{Unishment}} The prince(ss) is overjoyed]] and the narrative switches to using masculine pronouns for Fet-Fruners almost immediately, and in short order he overthrows the evil emperor, marries a noblewoman he rescued earlier in the story, and lives HappilyEverAfter.
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* In ''ComicBook/Spirit World2023'' Volume 2, the nonbinary Xanthe Zhou visits their parents' home. Their mother tries to capture them with binding talismans but they don't work because the talismans use Xanthe's deadname.

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* In ''ComicBook/Spirit World2023'' ''ComicBook/SpiritWorld2023'' Volume 2, the nonbinary Xanthe Zhou visits their parents' home. Their mother tries to capture them with binding talismans but they don't work because the talismans use Xanthe's deadname.

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