Singer and former Disney star Demi Lovato has been using the they/them pronouns since coming out as non-binary in May 2021.
Now, the singer, 29, has announced she's back to using she/her pronouns, after feeling more feminine this year.
In a recent interview with Spout Podcast, Lovato opened up about updating her pronouns to she/her again, saying: "I'm such a fluid person when it comes to my gender, my sexuality, my music, my creativity."
Here's everything you need to know about the reason behind Demi Lovato changing her pronouns and how she prefers to be referred to.
What are Demi Lovato's pronouns?
Demi Lovato has adopted she/her pronouns again, just over a year after coming out as non-binary and using they/them.
Opening up about her decision to go by feminine pronouns again, she said: "I’ve actually adopted the pronouns of she/her again. Recently I’ve been feeling more feminine, so I’ve adopted she/her again."
She explained: "I felt like, especially last year, my energy was balanced in my masculine and feminine energy. So that when I was faced with the choice of walking into a bathroom and it said women and men, I didn’t feel like there was a bathroom for me because I didn’t feel necessarily like a woman, I didn’t feel like a man."
She added that she "just felt like a human".
Describing herself as a very fluid person, Lovato is now using both 'they' and 'she' pronouns, according to her Instagram account.
When did Demi Lovato come out as non-binary?
Demi Lovato came out as non-binary in May 2021, through a video posted on social media.
In the video, the Sorry Not Sorry singer revealed that after some "healing and self-reflective work", she had the revelation that she identifies as non-binary and would be using they/them pronouns going forward.
To reflect the change, she updated her Instagram bio and added the they/them pronouns to it.
Lovato has always been open about her gender fluidity, saying that she might sometimes identify as transgender, sometimes as non-binary and gender nonconforming, and other times she identifies as a woman.
She said: "I have a feeling that it’s not going to ever go back to one way or the other, but I just, it’s about keeping it open and free and just I’m a very fluid person, and so that goes with how I express myself as well."
The singer has also assured that messing up her pronouns is not a big deal as long as people are trying to learn, adding: "Nobody's perfect. It’s just all about respect."