I'm starting to wonder if anyone out there is mostly masculine. LOL
As for me, I was mostly joking around. I think it's pretty contested what masculine and feminine is in the US, much less globally (arguably, there ain't no such thing, since each culture defines what it is to be a man and a woman). I was trying to get at that I think the test kind of assigns that "socially outspoken, active, impatient, decisive" to men and "passive, peacemaking, reserved" to women. Which doesn't really work, because all that is kind of in flux right now in the US anyway. I don't think there's that much that defines each gender at this point. Even my contractor-carpenter hubby is a sensitive guy, quite reserved, very artistic, and a total romantic. And I'm all those things but I'm also pretty into outdoorsy activities, I'm outspoken, and I love good debate. We're more like each other than either "gender" distinction, and I'd be willing to bet that others find the same thing. (Conversely, I know quite a few couples that are mutually interested in celebrities' lives, shopping, etc.)
Maybe it's more a class thing in the US. Both my husband and I came from that working class background and I notice that seems to be more distinctive than gender when we get together with other couples. I get along great with most other working class women, who I've often found to be really into either crafts and arts/domestic stuff or alternatively outdoorsy stuff. It's all the women into shopping and name brand stuff, the celebrities, etc. that I just don't "get." I don't know if I'm a tomboy, or what. I mean, I see as many women hikers as men, and know more environmental scientists and field anthropologists who are women at this point. And women are something like 80% of the horseback riders in the US. So I'm not in the minority.
I think maybe it's that "ideal" (i.e., what we think men/women are) vs. "real" (how we actually behave).