English

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Etymology

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From agora +‎ -phobe, see agoraphobia.

Noun

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agoraphobe (plural agoraphobes)

  1. Someone who suffers from agoraphobia.
    • 1974, Erwin Lausch, Manipulation; dangers and benefits of brain research:
      Through such substances the agoraphobes could come to like open spaces, and the 'scotophobes' enjoy the dark.
    • 1998, Jim Mortimore, chapter 3, in Beltempest, page 73:
      She has never considered herself either a claustrophobe or an agoraphobe but, well, this was different. This was both fears together – the fear of wide-open spaces jammed shoulder to shoulder with angry people.
    • 2007 November 4, Dave Itzkoff, “A Satirical Sit-Coms Memorable Music”, in New York Times[1]:
      The following season Mr. Murphy composed an original Broadway-style number for a scene in which Brian the dog attempts to persuade an elderly agoraphobe to leave her home.

Translations

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French

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Etymology

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From Ancient Greek ἀγορά (agorá) + -phobe.

Pronunciation

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Adjective

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agoraphobe (plural agoraphobes)

  1. agoraphobic

Noun

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agoraphobe m or f by sense (plural agoraphobes)

  1. agoraphobe
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Further reading

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