I don't have a phobia except for writing 'that' particular word.
avoidance aversion hate dread disgust apprehnsion
Answer 1There is no official medically recognised phobia of jail. However there are similar phobias:Cleithrophobia - Fear of being locked in a small, enclosed spaceClaustrophobia - Fear of small, enclosed spacesIsolophobia - Fear of being isolatedMonophobia - Fear of being aloneDikephobia - Fear of justice._________________________________________________Answer 2There is no official phobia. But the root of the word is in latin, so the translation could be, if the phobia was officially recognised, 'carcerephobia' as 'carcere' is jail and 'phobia' is fear.
Yes, there is a specific phobia known as "flatuphobia," which is the irrational fear of farting or flatulence. It can manifest as anxiety or embarrassment surrounding the act of passing gas in public or private settings.
The phobia name for the fear of the unknown is called Xenophobia.
The phobia of mascots is called masklophobia. It is a specific phobia characterized by an irrational fear or aversion towards people in costumes or mascot outfits.
Acrophobia is a phobia.
He has a phobia of heights.
Kelly was never able to stay home by herself because of her monophobia.
I think it's acrophobia
ArachnophobiaArachno is the prefix or stem of the word, while phobia is the suffix.
Kelly was never able to stay home by herself because of her monophobia.
yes, all things have a phobia
The word phobia comes from the greek word φόβος (fovos) which means fear.
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.
No, the word "Pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis" is not a phobia word. It is actually a lung disease caused by the inhalation of very fine silicate or quartz dust particles. The longest phobia word is "Hippopotomonstrosesquippedaliophobia," which ironically means the fear of long words.
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.
I used to have a severe phobia of heights when I was two because I couldn't stand seeing the bottom of stuff