transvestite• And every so often a transvestite would swagger past, some more obvious than others.• Sergio was quite right: if Bandeira was a transvestite he would do anything to prevent the fact from becoming known.• Half an hour later the charminghypothesisoccurred to me that Conchis was a transvestite.• Deaths and disclosures, universal and particular, denouements both unexpected and inexorable, transvestitemelodrama on all levels including the suggestive.• So the transvestitefails the test of humanist transgression.• The transvestite and the hermaphrodite: both were disturbingimages; perhaps they are less so now.
Origintransvestite
(1900-2000)Germantransvestit, from Latinvestire“to clothe”