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herisson
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I thought I would just add some additional information about the history of this word.

The Wikipedia entry Josh mentions cites a Popular Science article by Jennifer Abbasi, "Is Trypophobia a Real Phobia?" (July 25, 2011). Abbasi did some research and said that at the time

  • Trypophobia is not an official phobia recognized in scientific literature. For many (though perhaps not all) who have it, it's probably not even a real phobia, which the American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders says must interfere "significantly with the person's normal routine."

  • According to Martin Antony, a psychologist at Ryerson University in Toronto, past-president of the Canadian Psychological Association and author of The Anti-Anxiety Workbook, with the exception of a few terms (agoraphobia, claustrophobia and arachnophobia among them), professionals who study and treat phobias tend not to use all the Latin and Greek names that get tossed around on message boards and in the press.

  • Masai Andrews [...] who runs Trypophobia.com, founded the Facebook group page in 2009 when he was a sociology minor at SUNY-Albany.

  • Surprisingly, [a Wikipedia page for trypophobia] doesn't exist today [i.e. in 2011: there is one now in 2017]. "I can barely keep a page up on the subject without it getting taken down," Andrews says. In March 2009 the powers that be at Wikipedia determined trypophobia to be a "likely hoax and borderline patent nonsense." The deletion page also says that Wikipedia is "not for things made up one day." As for who actually made the word up, that distinction probably belongs to a blogger in Ireland named Louise, Andrews says. According to an archived Geocities page, Louise settled on "trypophobia" (Greek for "boring holes" + "fear") after corresponding with a representative at the Oxford English Dictionary. Louise, Andrews and trypophobia Facebook group members have petitioned the dictionary to include the word. The term will need to be used for years and have multiple petitions and scholarly references before the dictionary accepts it, Andrews says.

Wikipedia says the term was coined in 2005 and references Abbasi, but I can't actually find that information in that source. However, the date does seem to be confirmed in the archived Geocities page that Abbasi mentions and links to, currently accessible at http://web.archive.org/web/20090316071914/http://www.geocities.com/holephobia/trypophobia.html I will reproduce the relevant post for convenience and in case the link breaks:

Following my letter to the Oxford Word and Language Service on 12th May 2005, I have received a reply from Miss Margot Charlton of Ask Oxford - Oxford English Dictionary. Due to the content of this letter, thank you Miss Charlton for your reply, the name of this phobia is now trypophobia instead of my previously suggested trypaphobia. I quote from Miss Charton's letter below.

"I should perhaps point out that the -a of trypa represents the ending of a Greek feminine noun, and would normally be replaced by -o- in a combination ('trypophobia')."

This was of great interest to me and I am glad that my useage of the Greek was corrected, as my knowledge of Greek is very limited, being almost non-existant. I am now happy that trypophobia is a correctly constructed word.

On the issue of trypophobia being a word accepted into the dictionary, Miss Charlton makes the following comments:

**> "...there is nothing to prevent anyone inventing and using a new word,

but we do not start considering a dictionary entry untikl we have evidence that it has been in sustained and widespread use for quite some time."**

In other words, there is nothing preventing us calling our phobia anything we want! And this is why I have taken it upon myself to officially name this phobia:

TRYPOPHOBIA

Louise
23 May 2005
Ireland

Thanks to the following web pages for their resourses:
http://www.kypros.org/cgi-bin/lexicon
http://www.askoxford.com

JEL obliged a question I asked about the formation of the word with the following useful comment:

@sumelic, The stem of the feminine noun is "tryp-". The stem is combined variously with -a, -ano, -o. See Dictionary of Word Roots and Combining Forms. It's hard to say why -o in this case, because the choice was likely to have been capricious. A clue might be that the most directly appealing combinative form found in the OED is "trypograph". If not capricious, the choice of -o derives from the genitive plural (-on = "of holes") of the 1st declension. – JEL

herisson
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