{"@context":{"skos":"http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#","dc":"http://purl.org/dc/terms/","rdfs":"http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#","xsd":"http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#"},"@id":"https://homosaurus.org/v5/homoit0003974","dc:identifier":"homoit0003974","skos:prefLabel":[{"@language":"en","@value":"Warmipangui"},{"@language":"nl","@value":"Warmipangui"},{"@language":"sv","@value":"Warmipangui"}],"rdfs:comment":[{"@language":"en","@value":"Amongst the Canelos-Quichua, one of the indigenous Kichwa peoples of the Ecuadorian Amazon, this term is used to refer to people who were assigned male at birth but have the ability to transition between feminine and masculine. "},{"@language":"nl","@value":"Bij de Canelos-Quichua, een van de inheemse Kichwa-volkeren in het Ecuadoraanse Amazonegebied, wordt deze term gebruikt voor mensen die bij de geboorte als man zijn toegewezen, maar die de mogelijkheid hebben om van vrouwelijk naar mannelijk over te gaan."},{"@language":"sv","@value":"Bland Canelos-Quichua, ett av de inhemska kichwa-folken i ecuadorianska delen av Amazonas, används denna term för att hänvisa till personer som tilldelades manligt kön vid födseln men har förmågan att växla mellan feminin och maskulin."}],"skos:broader":[{"@id":"https://homosaurus.org/v5/homoit0000322","skos:prefLabel":{"@language":"en","@value":"Non-Euro-American gender and sexual identities"}}],"skos:related":[{"@id":"https://homosaurus.org/v5/homoit0003293","skos:prefLabel":{"@language":"en","@value":"South American Indigenous LGBTQ+ people"}}],"skos:hasTopConcept":{"@id":"https://homosaurus.org/v5/homoit0000560"},"dc:issued":{"@type":"xsd:date","@value":"2025-04-23"},"dc:modified":{"@type":"xsd:date","@value":"2026-06-30"},"@type":"skos:Concept","skos:inScheme":{"@id":"https://homosaurus.org/v4"},"skos:changeNote":"Version 5.0.4","skos:narrower":[],"dc:replaces":[],"dc:isReplacedBy":[]}