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  1. Aug 18, 2020 · Hypochondriac comes ultimately from the Greek word hypokhondria, which literally means “under the cartilage (of the breastbone).” In the late 16th century, when hypochondriac first entered the English language, it referred to the upper abdomen.

  2. Feb 11, 2015 · Hypochondria is defined as an excessive preoccupation with and worry about one's health Is there a word to describe the opposite reaction, as in a word to mean 'a nonchalant attitude towards on...

  3. Panthophobia is a fear of disease; nosophobia is closer, being a fear of becoming ill: but considering the number of things that can hurt or damage a person, pantophobia or panphobia (fear of everything) seems more appropriate.

  4. Dec 5, 2012 · That's how I think "hypochondriac" is commonly (non-medically) used. So "hypochondriacs" are on a spectrum between excessive-preoccupation (pursuing any doubt as to their being in health) and delusion (believing to be sick), and their opposites, on a spectrum between excessive-indifference/dismissal (to/of symptoms) and denial (of being sick).

  5. Feb 2, 2013 · I read the definition of hypochondria, but it does not say: is it correct to use this word, for instance, about parents who worry too much about their kid(s) being sick?

  6. It is, however, similar to a hypochondriac in the sense that they are creating or referring to illness that simply isn't there. The point of including the term is to note the phrase "by proxy" which could theoretically be a hint that the condition may have "by proxy" in its name.

  7. Aug 23, 2016 · A hypochondriacal person is someone who is excessively preoccupied with and worried about his or her health. Is there a term for the other end of the spectrum -- somebody extremely carefree,

  8. Feb 22, 2018 · Some people think that Veronica is a workaholic but what they don't know about her is that she actually suffers from a very debilitating and un-diagnosed chronic illness – she's really the opposite of a hypochondriac. I am not satisfied with previous answers to this question.

  9. Dec 24, 2014 · If you wanted to give a hypochondriac the benefit of the doubt, or just humour them, this would be a less pejorative word. See World Wide Words for a good description with examples. In Jane Austen's novel Emma, the heroine's father Mr Woodhouse is a classic valetudinarian. The word is from Latin valetudinarius = in ill health.

  10. Apr 23, 2011 · The hypochondriac ; low spirits. He is hypped ; he has got the blue devils, &c. The earliest example by Swift of the three that Farmer & Henley cites may indeed have appeared very soon after the slang term emerged, since it comes in the context of a letter chock-a-block with abbreviated words and other bits of slang that Swift was mocking (and evidently detested).

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