folx

Etymology
Variant of ; while the word was already gender-neutral, the suffix is a deliberate social signal of awareness of sexual minorities. Compare.

Noun

 * 1) * 1628 February 26, Thomas Button, in a letter to the Lord Vicount Dorchester, quoted in Some account of sir Robert Mansel ... and of sir Thomas Button (George Thomas Clark, Dowlais, 1883), p. 86:
 * I presume yor lo. will fynde to be very stronge besides the qualitie of the peticonars to be lookte vppon, whoe if they be noe other then as folx [also fox] is stilde mear mariners, it cannot promise muche of their extraordinarie performancis, as hath bin made appeare formerlye in this perticuler designe, [...]
 * 1) * 1879, M. Star, in The American Temperance Cyclopaedia of History (Joseph Beaumont Wakeley), page 185, ostensibly quoting one Missa Param:
 * If some do, da hypocrites, and dat don't militate 'gains de siety; for cause da some hypocrites, dat proves dat some good folx.
 * 1)  Folks; people.
 * 2) * 2004, Maximum Rocknroll, issue 255:
 * This time around the fine folx of Rocktober bring us the greatest rocknroll [sic] moments in television history.
 * 1) * 2004, Maximum Rocknroll, issue 255:
 * This time around the fine folx of Rocktober bring us the greatest rocknroll [sic] moments in television history.

Etymology
.

Noun

 * 1) scythe