-phobia


a combining form meaning “fear,” occurring in loanwords from greek (hydrophobia); on this model, used in the names of mental disorders that have the general sense “dread of, aversion toward” that specified by the initial element:
agoraphobia.
-phobia
combining form
indicating an extreme abnormal fear of or aversion to acrophobia, claustrophobia
derived forms
-phobic, combining_form:in_adjective
word origin
via latin from greek, from phobos fear

-phobia suff.
an intense, abnormal, or illogical fear of a specified thing: claustrophobia.

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    a combining form used to form personal nouns corresponding to nouns ending in -phobia: anglophobe. also, -phobiac. -phobe combining form indicating a person or thing that fears or hates germanophobe, xenophobe derived forms -phobic, combining_form:in_adjective word origin from greek -phobos fearing -phobe comb. form meaning “fearing,” from fr. -phobe, from l. -phobus, from gk. -phobos […]

  • -phobic

    a combining form used to form adjectives corresponding to nouns ending in -phobe: acrophobic; photophobic. -phobic or -phobous suff. having a fear of or an aversion for: photophobic. lacking an affinity for: lyophobic.

  • -phony

    a combining form used in the formation of abstract nouns corresponding to nouns ending in -phone: telephony. -phony combining form indicating a specified type of sound cacophony, euphony derived forms -phonic, combining_form:in_adjective word origin from greek -phōnia, from phōnē sound -phony suff. sound: microphony.

  • -phore

    a combining form meaning “bearer of,” “thing or part bearing” that specified by the initial element: gonoph-r-. compare -phorous. -ph-r- combining form indicating a person or thing that bears or produces gonoph-r-, semaph-r- derived forms -phorous, combining_form:in_adjective word origin from new latin -phorus, from greek -phoros bearing, from pherein to bear -ph-r- suff. bearer; carrier: […]

  • -phoresis

    combining form indicating a transmission electroph-r-sis word origin from greek phorēsīs being carried, from pherein to bear -ph-r-sis suff. transmission: electroph-r-sis.


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