Citations:phobiæ

Noun: plural of

 * 1894, The American Practitioner; Volume XVIII., №. 2, page #85:
 * There are also a very great number of phobiæ peculiar to certain professional persons, as physicians, artists, merchants, which have yet to be Hellenized and classified.
 * 1905, William Broaddus Pritchard in Canadian Journal of Medicine and Surgery, W. A. Young; Volume XVIII., №. 1, pages 14–15:
 * Rapid motion, as in the cars or a carriage, high places, sudden changes in the visual perspective, originate as many phobiæ.
 * 1911, Frank Billings and J. H. Salisbury, General Medicine, The Year Book Publishers; page #244:
 * Occasionally the patient is thrown into a sort of tetany. Many patients have phobiæ.
 * 1922, Hugh Crichton Miller, The New Psychology and the Teacher, Thomas Seltzer; Chapter VI., pages 130–131:
 * His obsessions, phobiæ, compulsions, inertia or physical symptoms : his neurosis, whatever form it takes, means to him a loss of freedom and of happiness ; and this in itself proves to him that it is something that has come upon him against his will.