Which Jokku Gender Am I?
Explanation

      This quiz is not intended to identify your gender as a human . . . but rather to show you how you would fit into a Jokku society. Answering a question awarded you a number of points to either one or several categories, depending on how strongly a given Jokkad of a certain gender would feel about the answer. The questions were weighted more strongly in favor of gender (how the society teaches individuals to act based on their sex) than in favor of sex, the strictly biological. Given that, here's what the Jokka have to say about the questions:

      "Only an eperu would be crazy enough to like a darkness that's about to lead to daylight. And it is the anadi who feels the most relief at dusk's approach."
      "Who solves problems in a House? I suppose it depends. An emodo will do it if he knows how. An anadi is more apt to allow others to solve them for her. Eperu, now, they exist to help."
      "World-walker, you are trying to trick our visitors, aren't you? Of course, anadi have small hands, and emodo delicate ones and eperu strong ones, but you've asked them what they want their partner to have, knowing that most of your people seem to love across sexes, not within them." [World-walker says: "Of course I tried to trick them. This isn't about what sex they are as humans, but what gender they'd be as Jokka..."]
      "All Jokka like to have friends. But anadi take great comfort in one another, it seems. Having a prosperous and happy family... well, that's something both emodo and eperu like, but eperu especially: they are their House's helpmeets, and since they can have no offspring they often feel responsible for the entire House. And of course, emodo are most in love with crafts."
      [ The World-walker sneaks a peek at everyone's feet, then adds a strictly biological question to the quiz: emodo are born with the most dextrous feet, and anadi with the least. ]
      "Anadi, emodo and eperu colors?" A puzzled look. "If you had to choose, I would guess on the colors of the Trinity. So the black of the Void for emodo, the brilliance of white for the Brightness, an anadi; and gray, for the stone of the eperu World."
      "Ah... beauty. The beauty of the ephemeral... that is most anadi. The beauty of the works of the hand, of society... that is most emodo. And for the eperu, there is comfort in the beauty of nature."
      "Where do we like to find peace? Anadi would prefer water, cool stone, away from sunlight. And emodo . . . well, a cozy place, like a glade, maybe with a little sun. And as for the eperu . . . give it the glory of the flattest, broadest plains, with the World all around it."