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ᱨᱮᱫ:Transgender Pride flag.svg

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ᱣᱤᱠᱤᱯᱤᱰᱤᱭᱟ, ᱨᱟᱲᱟ ᱜᱮᱭᱟᱱ ᱯᱩᱛᱷᱤ ᱠᱷᱚᱱ

ᱟᱥᱚᱞ ᱨᱮᱫ (SVG ᱨᱮᱫ, ᱱᱚᱨᱢᱟᱞᱛᱮ ᱕᱑᱒ x ᱓᱐᱗ pixels, ᱨᱮᱫ ᱡᱟᱜᱟ: ᱒᱗᱓ bytes)

ᱱᱚᱣᱟ ᱨᱮᱫ ᱫᱚ ᱱᱚᱸᱰᱮ ᱠᱷᱚᱱ Wikimedia Commons ᱟᱨ ᱯᱟᱥᱮᱡ ᱮᱴᱟᱜ-ᱟ ᱯᱚᱨᱡᱮᱠᱴ ᱨᱮᱦᱚᱸ ᱵᱮᱵᱦᱟᱨᱚᱜ ᱠᱟᱱᱟ᱾ ᱱᱚᱣᱟ ᱨᱮᱭᱟ ᱯᱟᱥᱱᱟᱣ ᱠᱟᱛᱷᱟ ᱨᱮᱫ ᱯᱟᱥᱱᱟᱣ ᱥᱟᱦᱴᱟ ᱞᱟᱛᱟᱨᱨᱮ ᱮᱢ ᱮᱱᱟ᱾

ᱢᱩᱬᱩᱛ ᱠᱟᱛᱷᱟ

ᱵᱤᱵᱚᱨᱚᱱᱤ
English: The Transgender Pride flag was designed by Monica Helms, and was first shown at a pride parade in Phoenix, Arizona, USA in 2000.

The flag represents the transgender community and consists of five horizontal stripes, two light blue, two pink, with a white stripe in the center.

Monica describes the meaning of the flag as follows:

"The light blue is the traditional color for baby boys, pink is for girls, and the white in the middle is for those who are transitioning, those who feel they have a neutral gender or no gender, and those who are intersexed. The pattern is such that no matter which way you fly it, it will always be correct. This symbolizes us trying to find correctness in our own lives".
Русский: Флаг трансгендерного прайда был разработан Моникой Хелмс и впервые был показан на параде в Фениксе, штат Аризона, США, в 2000 году.
ᱢᱟᱹᱦᱤᱛ SVG file 2006
ᱯᱷᱮᱰᱟᱛ

Description above retrieved from page "Image_talk:Transgender_Pride_flag.svg" at en.wikipedia.

The flag was flown from a large public flagpole in San Francisco's Castro District beginning November 19, 2012 in commemoration of the Transgender Day of Remembrance ("Transgender Flag Flies In San Francisco's Castro District After Outrage From Activists" by Aaron Sankin, HuffingtonPost, November 20, 2012).

On 19 August 2014, Monica Helms donated the original Transgender Pride Flag to the Smithsonian National Museum of American History.
ᱚᱱᱚᱞᱤᱭᱟᱹ SVG file Dlloyd based on Monica Helms design
ᱟᱹᱭᱫᱟᱹᱨᱤ
(ᱱᱚᱣᱟ ᱨᱮᱫ ᱫᱚᱲᱦᱟᱛᱮ ᱵᱮᱵᱷᱟᱨ)
LGBT symbol Legal disclaimer
This image or video file contains a symbol that represents sexual and gender minorities, including lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender.

Use of these symbols may be subject to punishment according to applicable laws in Afghanistan, Iran, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Uganda, the United Arab Emirates, etc. In Russia, the applicable law is federal law #195-FZ.

In addition, using these symbols for the purpose of discriminating against sexual and gender minorities may be subject to punishment under anti-discrimination laws in the Netherlands, Sweden, the United Kingdom, etc. In the United Kingdom, the applicable law is the Public Order Act 1986.


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Derivative works of this file:

Flag colors
InfoField
     ᱞᱤᱞ rendered as RGB 091 206 250
     pink rendered as RGB 245 169 184
     ᱯᱩᱸᱰ rendered as RGB 255 255 255
SVG genesis
InfoField
 
The SVG code is valid.
 
This flag was created with a text editor.
 
Please do not replace the simplified code of this file with a version created with Inkscape or any other vector graphics editor
Source code
InfoField

SVG code

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 800 480">
  <rect fill="#5BCEFA" width="800" height="480" />
  <rect fill="#F5A9B8" width="800" height="288" y="96" />
  <rect fill="#FFF" width="800" height="96" y="192" />
</svg>
273 bytes

ᱞᱟᱭᱥᱮᱱᱥ ᱛᱮᱭᱟᱨ

Public domain This image of a flag is ineligible for copyright and therefore in the public domain, because it consists entirely of information that is common property and contains no original authorship. For more information, see Commons:Threshold of originality § Logos and flags.
Flag
Flag

Captions

Add a one-line explanation of what this file represents
Transgender flag, designed in 1999, by Monica Helms

Items portrayed in this file

ᱞᱟ.ᱭᱟᱭ

transgender pride flag ᱟᱝᱜᱽᱨᱮᱡᱤ

media type ᱟᱝᱜᱽᱨᱮᱡᱤ

image/svg+xml

ᱨᱮᱫ ᱨᱮᱭᱟᱜ ᱱᱟᱜᱟᱢ

ᱚᱠᱛᱚ ᱨᱮ ᱞᱤᱱ ᱢᱮ/ᱚᱠᱛᱚ ᱨᱮ ᱨᱮᱫ ᱧᱮᱞ ᱞᱟᱹᱜᱤᱛ ᱞᱤᱱ ᱢᱮ

ᱢᱟᱹᱦᱤᱛ/ᱚᱠᱛᱚᱴᱤᱯᱡᱚᱠᱷᱟᱵᱮᱵᱷᱟᱨᱤᱭᱟᱹᱠᱟᱛᱷᱟ
ᱱᱤᱛᱚᱜ᱐᱑:᱕᱒, ᱒᱖ ᱡᱩᱱ ᱒᱐᱒᱓᱐᱑:᱕᱒, ᱒᱖ ᱡᱩᱱ ᱒᱐᱒᱓ ᱞᱮᱠᱟᱛᱮ ᱛᱷᱚᱢᱵᱽᱱᱮᱞ ᱵᱷᱚᱨᱥᱚᱱ᱕᱑᱒ × ᱓᱐᱗ (᱒᱗᱓ bytes)CalendulaAsteraceaeuse rect, which is more human-readable than path
᱐᱕:᱔᱒, ᱕ ᱡᱩᱱ ᱒᱐᱒᱓᱐᱕:᱔᱒, ᱕ ᱡᱩᱱ ᱒᱐᱒᱓ ᱞᱮᱠᱟᱛᱮ ᱛᱷᱚᱢᱵᱽᱱᱮᱞ ᱵᱷᱚᱨᱥᱚᱱ᱕᱑᱒ × ᱓᱐᱗ (᱒᱔᱓ bytes)IndysNotHereReverted to version as of 13:04, 6 April 2018 (UTC) 95% of the Trans flags in existence follow this ratio, and it is more common to see 3:5 Trans flags.
᱐᱔:᱒᱔, ᱘ ᱚᱠᱴᱚᱵᱚᱨ ᱒᱐᱒᱒᱐᱔:᱒᱔, ᱘ ᱚᱠᱴᱚᱵᱚᱨ ᱒᱐᱒᱒ ᱞᱮᱠᱟᱛᱮ ᱛᱷᱚᱢᱵᱽᱱᱮᱞ ᱵᱷᱚᱨᱥᱚᱱ᱕᱑᱒ × ᱒᱕᱖ (᱒᱔᱓ bytes)PlasamasReverted to version as of 21:51, 5 April 2018 (UTC) what certifies "better proportions" I think it is best to revert to the older variety until this claim is proven.
᱑᱓:᱐᱔, ᱖ ᱮᱯᱨᱤᱞ ᱒᱐᱑᱘᱑᱓:᱐᱔, ᱖ ᱮᱯᱨᱤᱞ ᱒᱐᱑᱘ ᱞᱮᱠᱟᱛᱮ ᱛᱷᱚᱢᱵᱽᱱᱮᱞ ᱵᱷᱚᱨᱥᱚᱱ᱕᱑᱒ × ᱓᱐᱗ (᱒᱔᱓ bytes)Keymap93:5 ratio.
᱑᱒:᱒᱑, ᱖ ᱮᱯᱨᱤᱞ ᱒᱐᱑᱘᱑᱒:᱒᱑, ᱖ ᱮᱯᱨᱤᱞ ᱒᱐᱑᱘ ᱞᱮᱠᱟᱛᱮ ᱛᱷᱚᱢᱵᱽᱱᱮᱞ ᱵᱷᱚᱨᱥᱚᱱ᱕᱑᱒ × ᱓᱑᱖ (᱒᱔᱓ bytes)Keymap9Better proportions.
᱒᱑:᱕᱑, ᱕ ᱮᱯᱨᱤᱞ ᱒᱐᱑᱘᱒᱑:᱕᱑, ᱕ ᱮᱯᱨᱤᱞ ᱒᱐᱑᱘ ᱞᱮᱠᱟᱛᱮ ᱛᱷᱚᱢᱵᱽᱱᱮᱞ ᱵᱷᱚᱨᱥᱚᱱ᱕᱑᱒ × ᱒᱕᱖ (᱒᱔᱓ bytes)Keymap9SVGOMG optimization.
᱑᱗:᱑᱔, ᱕ ᱮᱯᱨᱤᱞ ᱒᱐᱑᱘᱑᱗:᱑᱔, ᱕ ᱮᱯᱨᱤᱞ ᱒᱐᱑᱘ ᱞᱮᱠᱟᱛᱮ ᱛᱷᱚᱢᱵᱽᱱᱮᱞ ᱵᱷᱚᱨᱥᱚᱱ᱕᱑᱒ × ᱒᱕᱖ (᱓᱖᱐ bytes)Keymap9Code cleanup.
᱒᱒:᱑᱑, ᱒᱒ ᱱᱚᱵᱷᱮᱢᱵᱚᱨ ᱒᱐᱑᱒᱒᱒:᱑᱑, ᱒᱒ ᱱᱚᱵᱷᱮᱢᱵᱚᱨ ᱒᱐᱑᱒ ᱞᱮᱠᱟᱛᱮ ᱛᱷᱚᱢᱵᱽᱱᱮᱞ ᱵᱷᱚᱨᱥᱚᱱ᱘᱐᱐ × ᱔᱐᱐ (᱓᱒᱑ bytes)AnonMoosmaking pink more pink, based on verbal description and HuffingtonPOst photo
᱒᱓:᱕᱑, ᱑᱗ ᱢᱮ ᱒᱐᱑᱒᱒᱓:᱕᱑, ᱑᱗ ᱢᱮ ᱒᱐᱑᱒ ᱞᱮᱠᱟᱛᱮ ᱛᱷᱚᱢᱵᱽᱱᱮᱞ ᱵᱷᱚᱨᱥᱚᱱ᱘᱐᱐ × ᱔᱐᱐ (᱔᱕᱓ bytes)MnmazurCode cleanup
᱐᱙:᱐᱓, ᱒᱓ ᱡᱟᱱᱩᱣᱟᱨᱤ ᱒᱐᱐᱖᱐᱙:᱐᱓, ᱒᱓ ᱡᱟᱱᱩᱣᱟᱨᱤ ᱒᱐᱐᱖ ᱞᱮᱠᱟᱛᱮ ᱛᱷᱚᱢᱵᱽᱱᱮᱞ ᱵᱷᱚᱨᱥᱚᱱ᱘᱐᱐ × ᱔᱐᱐ (᱕᱓᱒ bytes)Dlloyd~commonswikiThe Transgender Pride flag was designed by Monica Helms, and was first shown at a pride parade in Phoenix, Arizona, USA in 2000. The flag represents the transgendered community and consists of five horizontal stripes, two light blue, two pink, with a whi

ᱱᱚᱸᱰᱮ ᱫᱚ ᱟᱨ ᱮᱴᱟᱜ ᱥᱟᱦᱴᱟᱠᱚ ᱵᱟᱱᱩᱜ-ᱟ ᱡᱟᱸᱦᱟᱸ ᱥᱟᱶᱛᱮ ᱱᱤᱭᱟᱹ ᱨᱮᱫ ᱨᱮᱱᱟᱜ ᱡᱚᱱᱚᱲ ᱢᱮᱱᱟᱜ-ᱟ

ᱡᱮᱜᱮᱛ ᱡᱟᱠᱟᱛ ᱨᱮᱫ ᱵᱮᱵᱷᱟᱨᱟᱜ

ᱱᱚᱶᱟ ᱨᱮᱫᱠᱚ ᱵᱮᱵᱷᱟᱨᱟᱠᱟᱫ ᱣᱤᱠᱤᱠᱚ :

ᱱᱚᱶᱟ ᱨᱮᱫ ᱨᱮᱱᱟᱜ ᱵᱟᱹᱲᱛᱤ ᱡᱮᱜᱮᱛ ᱵᱮᱵᱷᱟᱨ ᱧᱮᱞ ᱢᱮ ᱾

ᱢᱮᱴᱟ ᱥᱟᱹᱠᱷᱭᱟᱹᱛ