File:Obscure-female-symbols.svg

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These are some lesser-known or less historically important symbols meaning "female" and/or "woman". (The well-known and historically important symbols with this meaning are included in another graphic, File:Female symbols.svg)

1) A crescent moon, which can symbolize a woman when a contrasting sun symbol (usually drawn with flaming rays) symbolizes a man. This was used in some allegorical contexts, and supposedly also on the doors of early 19th-century women's outhouses in the United States.

2) The main symbol for a woman in Chapter I of Rudolf Koch's Book of Signs. The corresponding symbol for a man is a vertical line with two upwards diagonal lines branching off near the top. (This is also used as the sign for "woman" in Blissymbols, but the bottom corners would be rounded rather than angled..)

3) A downward-pointing angle (the "chalice") which is used in some occultistic/neopagan contexts (the corresponding male symbol being the upward-pointing angle or "blade"). This can also appear as a downward-pointing triangle, though a basic unelaborated triangle is actually rather ambiguous in meaning (Rudolf Koch prefers the upward-pointing triangle as a female sign instead, and in some versions of modern bathroom symbols, a circle on top of an upward-pointing triangle -- similar to the ancient symbol of the goddess Tanit -- indicates a women's restroom, while a circle on top of a downward-pointing triangle indicates a men's restroom). For a slightly elaborated version of a downward-pointing triangle which is an unambiguous female symbol, see File:Female symbols.svg...

4) The female symbol of the "Labanotation" dance writing system. The corresponding male symbol would change the inside hollow circle to a filled circle.

Note that a simple circle often indicates woman or female in genealogical charts, sociograms, kinship terminology diagrams, etc. However, a circle would not be commonly understood as meaning "woman"/"female" as a stand-alone symbol (outside the context of such a diagram), and so is not included in this image or in File:Female symbols.svg.
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Crescent shape taken from PD image File:Triple_Goddess_Symbol_Filled.svg

 
This vector image includes elements that have been taken or adapted from this file:
Triple Goddess Symbol Filled.svg.

The Labanotation female symbol was converted from the following PostScript vector source code:

%!
12 setlinewidth
72 72 42 0 360 arc closepath
stroke gsave
40 setlinewidth 1 setgray
72 128 moveto 72 93.24 lineto
stroke grestore
72 172 moveto 72 92 lineto
stroke
72 72 16 0 360 arc closepath
stroke showpage
%EOF
The other symbols were made by myself from scratch (based on publicly-available information) and declared by me to be PD
Author AnonMoos
Permission
(Reusing this file)
Public domain I, the copyright holder of this work, release this work into the public domain. This applies worldwide.
In some countries this may not be legally possible; if so:
I grant anyone the right to use this work for any purpose, without any conditions, unless such conditions are required by law.
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More well-known or important female/woman symbols

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current02:58, 1 January 2017Thumbnail for version as of 02:58, 1 January 2017800 × 316 (815 bytes)AnonMoos (talk | contribs){{Information |Description=These are some lesser-known or less historically important symbols meaning "female" and/or "woman". (The well-known and historically important symbols with this meaning are included in another graphic, [[:File:Female symbols...

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