There are people on the web who say that the scientific name is "Inverseverticalitis." This is complete crap of course and utterly made up. Any kind of clinically diagnosed fear will have the Greek-derived suffix "-phobia" attached to it. The suffix "-itis" is used in medical terminology to indicate some sort of inflammation. As far as anyone knows, inflammation has absolutely nothing to do with fear of being upside down or any other phobia that we are aware of. So until someone comes up with a proper scientific name for this, just tell people you're afraid of being upside-down.
The phobia related to the fear of snakes is called ophidiophobiaOphidiophobia - Fear of snakes.
you treat the fear of falling off a ledge is to jump of really high ground like a big rock on to a soft pad then once you are trained enough you go sky diving with a friend to comfort you, then you jump and get rid of the fear of falling off a ledge.
Its a spin-off called 'The Dumping Ground'.
The fear of refrigerators and other household appliances: Oikophobia.
The force that pushes up on you when you jump vertically off the ground is called the normal force.
read off related turophobia (or very very close)
Example sentence - The children had no fear of being reprimanded because their parents were disinterested in their behavior.
Volley means to keep something off the ground. In volleyball the ball is not allowed to touch the ground. So essentially volleyball "keep the ball off the ground". I hope this helped. :)
Kip Up.
No, not without the front wheels being off the ground.
you're obviously scared because they can jump off and eat you!lol
If a 100 N box is lifted 3 meters off the ground, the answer is 300 joules.