Citations:vegephobia

Noun: "the fear or dislike of vegetables"

 * 1993, Zilpha Keatley Snyder, Fool's Gold, Open Road Integrated Media (2014), unnumbered page:
 * Like coming down with a bad case of dustaphobia (fear of cleaning up your room) or vegaphobia (fear of eating your carrots and peas).
 * 1997, Mary Carroll, "The High Five", Vegetarian Times, March 1997, page 52:
 * We may even carry some "vegephobia" with us from childhood, remembering Mom and those lima beans.
 * 2010, Beth Bader & Ali Benjamin, The Cleaner Plate Club: Raising Healthy Eaters One Meal at a Time, Storey Publishing (2010), ISBN 9781603425858, page 59:
 * Whether you have your own “vegephobia” to overcome or want to prepare family meals that everyone will eat, it's time to meet your vegetables all over again — and fall in love this time.
 * 2013, Mark Allerton, "Apart from shortness, vegephobia and addiction to technology, how are children different?", in Children's Court of NSW Resource Handbook, ISBN 9780731356324, page 23 (used in title only)
 * 2013, Mark Allerton, "Apart from shortness, vegephobia and addiction to technology, how are children different?", in Children's Court of NSW Resource Handbook, ISBN 9780731356324, page 23 (used in title only)

Noun: "the fear or dislike of vegetarians and vegans"

 * 2000, Steven G. Kellman, "Fish, Flesh, and Foul: The Anti-Vegetarian Animus", The American Scholar, Volume 69, Number 4, Autumn 2000:
 * But shadowing this history, like a fungus on a cantaloupe, is a chronicle of animosity—a persistent record of misunderstanding, mistrust, and misbehaviour toward those who refuse to consume fish, flesh, or fowl. Vegephobia blights Greek comedies of the third and fourth centuries that satirize Pythagoras, and it persists in belligerent banter by the dinner-party smart-ass intent on discrediting guests who prefer aubergine in tomato in vitello tonnato.
 * 2002, Alex Bourke, "Veggie Pride: Celebration in Paris", The Vegan, Autumn 2002, page 14:
 * Leaflets handed out to the public explained the goals of Veggie Pride: "To proclaim our existence. To express our pride. To denounce vegephobia.
 * 2011, Matthew Cole & Karen Morgan, "Vegaphobia: derogatory discourses of veganism and the reproduction of speciesism in UK national newspapers", The British Journal of Sociology, Volume 62, Issue 1, March 2011, page 146:
 * The following letter to The Sunday Times editor entangles vegaphobia and Islamaphobia in its response to a report of a Muslim supermarket worker being exempted from handling alcohol: