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单词 pantophobia
释义

pantophobian.

Brit. /ˌpantə(ʊ)ˈfəʊbɪə/, U.S. /ˌpæn(t)oʊˈfoʊbiə/
Origin: A borrowing from Latin. Etymon: Latin pantophobia.
Etymology: < post-classical Latin pantophobia (1768 or earlier) < panto- panto- comb. form + -phobia -phobia comb. form, probably after post-classical Latin pantophobus (5th cent. in Caelius Aurelianus) or Byzantine Greek παντοϕόβος all-fearing. Compare panophobia n.
Originally: †hydrophobia (rabies) (obsolete). Later: a condition characterized by groundless or irrational fears; fear of everything; generalized anxiety. Cf. panophobia n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > mental health > mental illness > degree or type of mental illness > [noun] > irrational fears
pneumatophobia1678
hydrophobia1760
aerophobia1771
panophobia1784
phobia1786
pantophobia1807
necrophobia1833
phoby1834
syphilomania1838
hippophobia1840
phonophobia1841
syphilophobia1842
scotophobia1844
astrophobia1855
sitomania1859
sitophobia1859
thanatophobia1860
Satanophobia1861
batrachophobia1863
panphobia1870
agoraphobia1871
bogyphobia1872
pathophobia1873
aquaphobia1875
toxiphobia1876
claustrophobia1879
cynophobia1879
mysophobia1879
siderodromophobia1879
phthisiophobia1883
sitiophobia1884
ochlophobia1885
sitiomania1887
acrophobia1888
zoophobia1888
leprophobia1889
nosophobia1889
pamphobia1890
bacteriophobia1894
tuberculophobia1894
taeniiphobia1897
thalassophobia1897
topophobia1899
dysmorphophobia1900
akathisia1903
cremnophobia1903
musicophobia1903
ailurophobia1905
brontophobia1905
phobism1914
arachnophobia1925
school phobia1930
coprophobia1934
mycophobia1957
arachniphobia1966
computer phobia1972
coulrophobia1997
the world > health and disease > mental health > mental illness > degree or type of mental illness > [noun] > madness in one or many aspects
monomania1815
polymania1828
oligomania1842
pantophobia1857
monoideism1860
monophobia1880
monopsychosis1883
the mind > emotion > fear > quality of terror or horror > [noun] > terror > melancholia marked by terror
panophobia1784
pantophobia1857
pamphobia1890
1807 R. Morris & J. Kendrick Edinb. Med. & Physical Dict. II Pantophobia, the same as Hydrophobia.
1842 R. Dunglison Med. Lexicon (ed. 3) Pantophobia, hydrophobia, panophobia.
1857 R. G. Mayne Expos. Lexicon Med. Sci. (1860) Pantophobia, term for a species of melancholy, characterised by causeless fears: pantophoby.
1872 Jrnl. Mental Sci. 18 438 Dr. Morel believes that it is only in exceptional cases of pantophobia that we observe suicide or hallucinations.
1893 New Sydenham Soc. Lexicon Pantophobia, a form of monomania characterised by causeless or excessive terror. Also, a synonym of Hydrophobia.
1897 tr. T. A. Ribot Psychol. Emotions 214 There exist some observations on a vague but permanent state of anxiety or terror, which has been called panphobia or pantophobia (Beard).
1931 Med. Jrnl. & Rec. 133 543/1 This is not a pantophobia, but a monophobia.
1972 P. S. White tr. E. de Martino World of Magic ii. 164 When suffering from a general anxiety crisis, the psychasthenic patient worries about everything and nothing, and this psychasthenic pantophobia..lies at the basis of various phobias.
1983 Verbatim Summer 20/1 Count your blessings that you are not a victim of pantophobia—the morbid dread of everything.
1996 G. E. Berrios Hist. Mental Symptoms xi. 269 One of the first to attempt such separation was Ribot who..distinguished between pantophobia (i.e. generalized anxiety state) and specific phobia.

Derivatives

pantoˈphobic adj. and n. (a) adj. of, relating to or suffering from pantophobia; (b) n. a person suffering from pantophobia.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > fear > quality of terror or horror > [adjective] > relating to melancholia marked by terror
pantophobic1857
pantophobous1893
the world > health and disease > mental health > mental illness > degree or type of mental illness > [adjective] > having irrational fears
hydrophobous1748
necrophobic1857
pantophobic1857
agoraphobic1878
claustrophobic1889
pantophobous1893
phobic1897
ailurophobic1905
claustrophobiac1934
scotophobic1936
phobiac1944
mycophobic1957
school-phobic1960
aquaphobic1968
ochlophobic1976
computer-phobic1983
arachniphobe1984
1857 R. G. Mayne Expos. Lexicon Med. Sci. (1860) Pantophobicus, of or belonging to Pantophobia: pantophobic.
1872 Jrnl. Mental Sci. 18 433 Dr. Morel insisted especially upon the very great frequence of pantophobic delirium as a result of fear of invasion by the Prusssians.
1931 Med. Jrnl. & Rec. 133 543/1 They eventually wear a clinical aspect which to the inexperienced does not appear different from that of the constitutional pantophobic.
1997 San Antonio (Texas) Express-News (Nexis) 27 July 4 l But if you know someone who is really pantophobic, it's probably a good idea to steer them away from ‘The Paranoid's Pocket Guide.’
pantophobous adj. Obsolete rare = pantophobic adj. and n.Apparently only attested in dictionaries or glossaries.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > fear > quality of terror or horror > [adjective] > relating to melancholia marked by terror
pantophobic1857
pantophobous1893
the world > health and disease > mental health > mental illness > degree or type of mental illness > [adjective] > having irrational fears
hydrophobous1748
necrophobic1857
pantophobic1857
agoraphobic1878
claustrophobic1889
pantophobous1893
phobic1897
ailurophobic1905
claustrophobiac1934
scotophobic1936
phobiac1944
mycophobic1957
school-phobic1960
aquaphobic1968
ochlophobic1976
computer-phobic1983
arachniphobe1984
1893 New Sydenham Soc. Lexicon Pantophobous, afflicted with Pantophobia.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2005; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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n.1807
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