Abibliophobia is the fear of running out of reading material.
Is Abibliophobia a word?
Abibliophobia is the fear of running out of reading material .
What does Abibliophobia mean?
Abibliophobia is the fear of running out of reading material .
Abibliophobia is the fear of running out of reading material.
Abibliophobia is the fear of running out of reading material .
Abibliophobia is the fear of running out of reading material .
Hippopotomonstrosesquippedaliophobia is one of the longest words in the dictionary — and, in an ironic twist, is the name for a fear of long words . Sesquipedalophobia is another term for the phobia.
Abibliophobia ( noun ) (humorous)
If the thought of or encounter with a large building, vehicle, or other object causes intense anxiety and fear, you may have megalophobia. Also known as a “fear of large objects ,” this condition is marked by significant nervousness that is so severe, you take great measures to avoid your triggers.
noun. one who loves horses .
You will be surprised to know that the longest word in English has 1, 89,819 letters and it will take you three and a half hours to pronounce it correctly. This is a chemical name of titin , the largest known protein.
So what’s the word? Wikipedia’s says that it’s “ Methionylthreonylthreonylglutaminylarginyl ... isoleucine” (ellipses necessary) , which is the “chemical name of titin, the largest known protein.” Also, there’s some dispute about whether this is really a word.
According to Oxford Dictionaries, malarkey is “ meaningless talk; nonsense ,” it came into use in the 1920s and its specific origin is unknown. There is an Irish name — Mullarkey. ... But there may be an Irish-American connection.
bumbershoot • BUM-ber-shoot • noun. : umbrella . Examples: Noticing that a light rain had just begun to fall, Grandpa turned to Susie and said, “Don’t forget to take your bumbershoot!” “
/ (ˈwæbɪt) / adjective. Scot weary; exhausted .
And this one, in particular, is a relatively common phobia. Bathophobia (fear of depths), cymophobia (fear of waves), megalohydrothalassophobia ( fear of large underwater sea creatures and objects ), and aquaphobia (fear of water) may also evolve into thalassophobic reactions.
Because trypophobia isn’t a true disorder , there’s no set treatment for it. Some studies show that an antidepressant like sertraline (Zoloft) plus a type of talk therapy called cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) are helpful. CBT tries to change the negative ideas that cause fear or stress.