Fictional Gynoids
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Fictional Gynoids
This list of fictional gynoids is sorted by media genre and alphabetised by character name or media title. Gynoids are humanoid robots that are gendered feminine. They appear widely in science fiction film and art. They are also known as female androids, female robots or fembots, although some media have used other terms such as robotess, cyberdoll, "skin-job", or Replicant. Although there are a variety of gynoids across genres, this list excludes female cyborgs (e.g. Seven of Nine in ''Star Trek: Voyager''), non-humanoid robots (e.g. EVE from ''Wall-E''), virtual female characters (Dot Matrix and women from the cartoon ''ReBoot'', Simone from ''Simone'' (2002 film), Samantha from ''Her''), holograms (Hatsune Miku in concert, Cortana from ''Halo''), non-robotic haunted dolls, and general Artificial intelligence network systems (SAL 9000, GLaDOS from ''Portal'') Gynoids for Japanese manga and anime are grouped separately. In film * The Alienator, from ''Alienator'' (1989) *Alsati ...
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Gynoid
A gynoid, or fembot, is a feminine humanoid robot. Gynoids appear widely in science fiction film and art. As more realistic humanoid robot design becomes technologically possible, they are also emerging in real-life robot design. Name A gynoid is anything that resembles or pertains to the female human form. Though the term '' android'' has been used to refer to robotic humanoids regardless of apparent gender, the Greek prefix "andr-" refers to ''man'' in the masculine sense. The term ''gynoid'' was first used by Isaac Asimov in a 1979 editorial, as a theoretical female equivalent of the word ''android''. Other possible names for feminine robots exist. The portmanteau "fembot" (feminine robot) was popularized by the television series ''The Bionic Woman'' in the episode "Kill Oscar" (1976) and later used in the ''Austin Powers'' films, among others. "Robotess" is the oldest female-specific term, originating in 1921 from '' Rossum's Universal Robots'', the same source as the ter ...
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