It depends.
What kind of cake is it? Is it a chocolate cake, or vanilla? Shoot, is it strawberry?
Furthermore, is it ice cream cake or regular?
THESE ARE VERY IMPORTANT FACTORS
the closest you can come to this is fear of food which is cibophobia
Jophaboia is the fear of cake.
I think it's acrophobia
ArachnophobiaArachno is the prefix or stem of the word, while phobia is the suffix.
pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis is not a phobia word its a lung disease but it is still the longest word in the world.
yes, all things have a phobia
The word "phobia" originates from the Greek language. It comes from the Greek word "phobos," which means fear or aversion.
No, the word phobia is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for a fear, a thing.An adjective is a word that describes a noun, for example: an irrational phobia, a mild phobia.Words that represent common phobias (claustrophobia, arachnophobia, coulrophobia) are also nouns.
Broccoliphobia is the word informally used to describe a phobia of broccoli - however it is not an official clinical phobia word. It was made up recently and has not been recognised by phobia psychologists. The fear of vegetables is Lachanophobia.
She has a phobia of spiders and can't even look at a picture of one without feeling anxious.
When the suffix -phobia is added to a word, it creates a noun that refers to a fear or aversion to the thing specified by the root word. For example, arachnophobia is a fear of spiders.
There is no tagalog word for cake, but you have to pronounce it keyk.
aracnophobia