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does wide= masc or fem
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Idk lemme ask chat gptdoes wide= masc or fem
masc imodoes wide= masc or fem
does wide= masc or fem
In general (speaking statistically, not absolutely):Idk lemme ask chat gpt
ask chatgpt to summarize i cba to read thatIn general (speaking statistically, not absolutely):
More specifically:
- Wider skulls (especially broader cheekbones, wider jaw, greater bizygomatic width) are more commonly associated with masculine sexual dimorphism.
- Taller / longer skulls (greater vertical height or length front-to-back) are not strongly gendered on their own. Height can appear in both, but when paired with certain traits it leans differently.
Traits more often read as masculine
Traits more often read as feminine
- Greater overall skull width
- Wider jaw and chin
- Thicker brow ridge / lower forehead
- More robust bone structure
That said:
- Narrower skull width
- Smaller jaw
- Higher, smoother forehead
- Less pronounced brow ridge
If you’re asking in a gender-presentation or dysphoria context, perception can often be shifted far more by grooming, hair, makeup, posture, or accessories than by skull proportions alone.
- There is huge overlap between sexes.
- An individual skull feature rarely determines perceived masculinity or femininity by itself.
- Face shape, soft tissue, hairline, neck, and styling matter just as much (often more).
It’s all about having a compact midfaceIn general (speaking statistically, not absolutely):
More specifically:
- Wider skulls (especially broader cheekbones, wider jaw, greater bizygomatic width) are more commonly associated with masculine sexual dimorphism.
- Taller / longer skulls (greater vertical height or length front-to-back) are not strongly gendered on their own. Height can appear in both, but when paired with certain traits it leans differently.
Traits more often read as masculine
Traits more often read as feminine
- Greater overall skull width
- Wider jaw and chin
- Thicker brow ridge / lower forehead
- More robust bone structure
That said:
- Narrower skull width
- Smaller jaw
- Higher, smoother forehead
- Less pronounced brow ridge
If you’re asking in a gender-presentation or dysphoria context, perception can often be shifted far more by grooming, hair, makeup, posture, or accessories than by skull proportions alone.
- There is huge overlap between sexes.
- An individual skull feature rarely determines perceived masculinity or femininity by itself.
- Face shape, soft tissue, hairline, neck, and styling matter just as much (often more).