phobiac
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From phobia + -ic. Modelled on maniac.
Adjective
[edit]phobiac (not comparable)
- Relating to a phobia; phobic.
- 1926, Studies in Psychology and Psychiatry from the Catholic University of America, volume 1 & 2, page 146:
- With phobiac writer's cramp, they will re-educate to write with blackboard exercises[.]
- 1949, Edward Glover, Psycho-analysis: A Handbook for Medical Practitioners and Students of Comparative Psychology, page 291:
- These fears are replaced to the phobiac object.
Noun
[edit]phobiac (plural phobiacs)
- A person with a phobia.
- 1913, Charles Ellewyn George, The Lawyer & Banker and Bench & Bar Review, volume 6, page 161:
- Defective types of psychoses are the most interesting kinds, like the maniacs, the melancholiacs, the phobiacs, the paranoiacs, the neurasthenics, the hysterical, etc.