Epicene

Epicene is an adjective (sometimes substantive) for loss of gender distinction, often specific loss of masculinity. It includes:
 * effeminacy — a male with female characteristics,
 * androgyny — having both male and female characteristics, or
 * asexuality — having neither male nor female characteristics.

Etymology
Epicene derives via Latin epicœnus from Greek epikoinos (, common to), literally epi (, upon) and koinos (, common).

Usage
The word epicene is placed in bold type in the following examples.

— Regis Nicoll. 'Is Gender Just a State of Mind?' In Salvo Magazine 2 (2007): 42-47. — Bill Cooke. 'Thoughts and Comments'. In The Open Society 78 (2005): 21. — Franz Lidz. 'Summer Films/Rising Stars: He Didn't Turn Out Obscure at All'. New York Times, 13 May 2001. — Ronald Bergan. Sergei Eisenstein: A Life in Conflict. Overlook Hardcover, 1999. — Almroth E Wright. The Unexpurgated Case Against Woman Suffrage. New York: Paul B Hoeber, 1913. — Sarah Grand. 'The New Woman and the Old'. Lady's Realm (1898): 466. — Charles Grant Blairfindie Allen. 'Plain Words on the Woman Question'. In Fortnightly Review 52 (1889): 448-458.
 * "In a garage band of my own, I sported the longer hair and cross-cutting fashions of the epicene trend."
 * of Harvey Wright: "He is best known for the sign he displayed in his shop addressed to 'epicene women', advising them to stay at home and not trouble themselves with affairs of the world best left to men."
 * of Jude Law: "He has a clear-eyed, epicene handsomeness — cruel, sensuous mouth; cheekbones to cut your heart on — the sort of excessive beauty that is best appreciated in repose on a 50-foot screen."
 * "She smothers (almost literally at times) her weak, epicene son Vladimir, and is prepared to commit any crime to see him become Tsar, despite his reluctance."
 * "Society shall be converted into an epicene institution."
 * "Who is this New Woman, this epicene creature, this Gorgon set up by the snarly who impute to her the faults of both sexes while denying her the charm of either — where is she to be found if she exists at all?"
 * of emancipated woman: "[a] dulled a spiritless epicene automaton."
 * "He represented an epicene species, neither churchman nor layman." — John Addington Symonds.
 * "The literary prigs epicene." — Horace Wilson.
 * "Epicene [...] Convents, wherein Monks and Nuns lived together." — Thomas Fuller, c. 1661.
 * Epicene Wildeblood is a character in the Illuminatus! trilogy.
 * Epicoene, or the Silent Woman is a Renaissance play by Ben Jonson.

Specialized uses
In linguistics, the adjective "epicene" is used to describe a word that has only one form for both male and female referents. In English, for example, the words "assassin" and "violinist" can refer to either a man or a woman. In languages with grammatical gender, the term "epicene" can be used in two distinct situations:
 * The same noun can refer to both males and females while keeping the same grammatical gender. For example, in New Testament Greek, parthenos (, "virgin") is a feminine noun, but it can also be used to refer to a man.
 * A noun or adjective has identical masculine and feminine forms. For example, in French, the noun enfant "child" and the adjective espiègle "mischievous" can be either masculine or feminine:
 * un enfant espiègle "a mischievous male child"
 * une enfant espiègle "a mischievous female child"