Eremiomania
noun
a passion for stillness, solitude
Word Origin
Latin eremita ‘recluse, hermit’
Read Also:
- Eremite
[er-uh-mahyt] /ˈɛr əˌmaɪt/ noun 1. a hermit or recluse, especially one under a religious vow. /ˈɛrɪˌmaɪt/ noun 1. a Christian hermit or recluse Compare coenobite n. c.1200, learned form of hermit (q.v.), from Church Latin eremita. Since mid-17c. in poetic or rhetorical use only, except in reference to specific examples in early Church history. Related: […]
- Eremitic
[er-uh-mahyt] /ˈɛr əˌmaɪt/ noun 1. a hermit or recluse, especially one under a religious vow. /ˈɛrɪˌmaɪt/ noun 1. a Christian hermit or recluse Compare coenobite n. c.1200, learned form of hermit (q.v.), from Church Latin eremita. Since mid-17c. in poetic or rhetorical use only, except in reference to specific examples in early Church history. Related: […]
- Eremitical
[er-uh-mahyt] /ˈɛr əˌmaɪt/ noun 1. a hermit or recluse, especially one under a religious vow. /ˈɛrɪˌmaɪt/ noun 1. a Christian hermit or recluse Compare coenobite n. c.1200, learned form of hermit (q.v.), from Church Latin eremita. Since mid-17c. in poetic or rhetorical use only, except in reference to specific examples in early Church history. Related: […]
- Eremitophobia
noun a fear of stillness, solitude, deserted places; also called eremophobia See eremophobia Word Origin Greek eraemia ‘solitude’
- Eremophilous
[er-uh-mof-uh-luh s] /ˌɛr əˈmɒf ə ləs/ adjective, Ecology. 1. requiring a desert habitat.