Do you refer to your friends as your girl friends?

Page 1 of 2 [ 18 posts ]  Go to page 1, 2  Next


Do you?
Yes 7%  7%  [ 2 ]
No 93%  93%  [ 25 ]
Total votes : 27

Lost_dragon
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 6 May 2017
Gender: Female
Posts: 2,948
Location: England

01 Aug 2020, 6:16 am

I don't, but I have known some women who refer to their platonic female friendship group as their girl friend(s). Personally, I find the term confusing since it can leave me wondering if the person I'm talking to is on about a romantic partner or a close friend. Usually I can figure it out based on the context and how they say it, such as if they say "gurl" instead of "girl". Still, I find it a little odd that people do this.

However, I think that it has fallen gradually out of common usage over the years, so I'm wondering how common it is here. I typically call my friends either "my mate" or "my friend" and use pronouns after that statement such as "My friend, (name), she...".

To a certain extent, I am straight-passing (I am openly gay but usually assumed straight). With that said, typically when I come out the response is "Ah OK" or "Yeah I called it / This is news?" rather than surprise. I think that if I were to call a close friend my girlfriend or refer to my close friends as my girlfriends it probably wouldn't be interpreted as platonic and some of my friends might even become creeped out if I did that.


_________________
Support human artists! Do not let the craft die.

25. Near the spectrum but not on it.


FleaOfTheChill
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 31 Jul 2020
Age: 309
Gender: Non-binary
Posts: 3,186
Location: Just outside of reality

01 Aug 2020, 6:48 am

I have never called female friends, girlfriends. It probably has something to do with me being bisexual (technically pan, but I am old and have been calling myself bi for so long it's grandfathered in now). In my reality, if someone has been my girlfriend, it was because I was dating them.



blazingstar
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 19 Nov 2017
Age: 70
Gender: Female
Posts: 6,234

01 Aug 2020, 7:10 am

Way back in the age of dinosaurs, everyone called adult women "girls." We of that generation fought long and hard to be considered women and to be treated as adults. It was so patronizing. A nurse giving a talk about birth control (and yes, the pill didn't used to be available and birth control wasn't so easy as it is today and abortions were illegal across the entire USA.) said to us, all adult women gathered there, "Now, girls..." We were all treated as little girls.

I pointed out we were no longer girls and we were there for a discussion of adult birth control and she needed to remember we were/are women.

This was long, long before any known sexual identity crises or active gay rights movements. There was no internet or facebook. You only knew what was in your home town area, or big news from the city.

This is just me, not wanting to be infantilized.

I cringe when I see adult women referring any adult women as a "girl friend." D*amn it, we are women. And it doesn't matter what your gender identity or sexual orientation is. You are still a woman. Unless you are transgender and that is for transgender people to decide how they want to be referred to.


_________________
The river is the melody
And sky is the refrain
- Gordon Lightfoot


Fireblossom
Veteran
Veteran

Joined: 18 Jan 2017
Gender: Female
Posts: 3,577

01 Aug 2020, 3:53 pm

No. I just call them friends.



Edna3362
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 29 Oct 2011
Gender: Female
Posts: 12,657
Location: ᜆᜄᜎᜓᜄ᜔

06 Aug 2020, 5:25 pm

No. :o


_________________
Gained Number Post Count (1).
Lose Time (n).

Lose more time here - Updates at least once a week.


Skilpadde
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 7 Dec 2008
Age: 47
Gender: Female
Posts: 27,019

08 Aug 2020, 5:07 am

No, in English I would never refer to a friend as girl friend. Girl friend is a romantic term for me.

In Norwegian we have the terms venn and venninne. Venninne kan mean both romantic girl friend and platonic female friend, but it was more commonly used for romance in previous times, so the people saying it are usually rather old.
To me non-romantic venninne is something little girls and women older than me have (and also something little girls or people older than me say). It's unnatural to me and makes me uncomfortable. Friend or venn suffice.


_________________
BOLTZ 17/3 2012 - 12/11 2020
Beautiful, sweet, gentle, playful, loyal
simply the best and one of a kind
love you and miss you, dear boy

Stop the wolf kills! https://www.thepetitionsite.com/takeact ... 3091429765


blooiejagwa
Veteran
Veteran

Joined: 19 Dec 2017
Age: 34
Gender: Female
Posts: 5,793

08 Aug 2020, 6:17 am

No bcuz I don't understand the relevance their gender has when referring to them
I also don't think gender is anything to go on where you separate gender when talking about people because it seems rude to me to do that about someone like I view their gender before them as a person


_________________
Take defeat as an urge to greater effort.
-Napoleon Hill


xxZeromancerlovexx
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 24 Jul 2010
Age: 31
Gender: Female
Posts: 3,915
Location: In my imagination

08 Aug 2020, 1:31 pm

I just call them friends. The reason I say that I want female friends is because I want other female friends on the spectrum who are HFA and like what I like. Girl friends sounds romantic. I’m straight.


_________________
“There’s a lesson that we learn
In the pages that we burn
It’s written in the ashes of the fire below”
-Down, The Birthday Massacre


dragonsanddemons
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 19 Mar 2011
Gender: Non-binary
Posts: 6,659
Location: The Labyrinth of Leviathan

08 Aug 2020, 2:16 pm

Considering that all of my recent friends have been male, that would be kind of awkward if I did :lol:

Never did it back when I had female friends, but granted that was in elementary school.


_________________
Yet in my new wildness and freedom I almost welcome the bitterness of alienage. For although nepenthe has calmed me, I know always that I am an outsider; a stranger in this century and among those who are still men.
-H. P. Lovecraft, "The Outsider"


blooiejagwa
Veteran
Veteran

Joined: 19 Dec 2017
Age: 34
Gender: Female
Posts: 5,793

09 Aug 2020, 5:40 pm

Just to say I dont have real friends

Just ones who happened to like me enough to hang out with me in different high schools


but nothing now except those..


Who knew me only 1 year in 10th grade before i moved or only 1 yr in gr 8 etc
etc and that too only during the lunch break or bus stop



They call themselves friends but someone you get to meet about 1ce every 2 years is not really a friend are they..


N share nothing in ur daily life except t
Me or them will message or call once in a blue moon ..

living vastly different lives in different cities or countries...

where they wdnt have anything in common at all except the few memories.

So is that a friend? I am guessing the ppl here have actual friends not someone they only knew in grade 10 or 11...

So whatever I say isn't really applicable to begin with .. :roll:


_________________
Take defeat as an urge to greater effort.
-Napoleon Hill


luluofthevalley
Emu Egg
Emu Egg

Joined: 10 Sep 2020
Age: 35
Gender: Female
Posts: 2

12 Sep 2020, 6:23 pm

No, and I always found that to be a rather weird custom.



AEqualsBCD
Tufted Titmouse
Tufted Titmouse

User avatar

Joined: 20 Feb 2020
Age: 27
Gender: Female
Posts: 44
Location: Alaska

16 Sep 2020, 11:08 am

When I was still at school I always referred to my friends as my girlfriends, it was sort of our thing, they referred to me as a girlfriend as well. I don't have any friends now but if I did I would still refer to them as my girlfriends.



Wish_Caster
Tufted Titmouse
Tufted Titmouse

Joined: 12 Oct 2020
Age: 2023
Gender: Male
Posts: 45
Location: Ohio

12 Oct 2020, 10:25 pm

No I’m gay so that would be confusing. I just refer to the few female friends I have as friends.



Leahcar
Toucan
Toucan

User avatar

Joined: 31 Jan 2016
Gender: Non-binary
Posts: 259
Location: United Kingdom

15 Oct 2020, 10:12 am

I have female friends. But the only person I would call a "girl friend" is my girlfriend. To me, the words girlfriend and boyfriend, even with the space, make me think of romantic/sexual relationships, not platonic friendships.


_________________
I'm sailing across Spectrum Sea, in my little boat.
The waters of the port were choppy. After I set off, there was a long, massive storm.
Years later, however, the sea calmed. I'm still on tranquil sea, but I'll never reach the Neurotypical Beach.


starkid
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 9 Feb 2012
Gender: Female
Posts: 5,812
Location: California Bay Area

17 Oct 2020, 1:45 pm

I don't have any friends but I would not call them girl friends if I did. Referring to female friends that way is just not something I ever internalized; it seems more like an old-fashioned term. I've not heard it used in my generation nor in younger generations.



martianprincess
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 22 Jun 2019
Age: 34
Gender: Female
Posts: 2,048
Location: Kansas

26 Oct 2020, 12:33 pm

No, I never do. I notice a lot of the older generation do it though. I just get slightly confused at first, thinking they are referring to their romantic partner. Same-sex relationships are so normal to me now I don't think twice unless I know they are already in a relationship or something.


_________________
The phone ping from a pillow fort in a corn maze
I don't have a horse in your war games
I don't even really like horses
I like wild orchids and neighbors with wide orbits