Citations:homomisia

English citations of homomisia

hatred of homosexuals

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  • 1989, Marshall Kirk, Hunter Madsen, After the Ball: How America Will Conquer Its Fear and Hatred of Gays in the '90s, Doubleday Books
    Well, Greek roots failed us; 'homomisia' would be etymologically satisfactory, but it don't mean a thing if it ain't got that swing - and it ain't. The plain English has the advantage of being blunt. Homohatred it is, []
  • [1996 May 26, Matthew Rabuzzi, “Re: the word homophobia”, in sci.lang[1] (Usenet):
    Many have now expressed logomisia (dislike or hatred of a word) for the word 'homophobia', partly because the 'phobia' part suggests fear rather than hate (and also because that seems to dignify it as a psychiatric condition).
    Taking a parallel from the word 'logomisia', then, one could propose 'homomisia' (or 'homophilomisia', rather unwieldy).
    ]
  • 2010, Masiiwa Ragies Gunda, The Bible and Homosexuality in Zimbabwe:
    [] The argument that homophobia or homomisia was never part of the indigenous communities but was introduced by Europeans during the colonial era is an interesting assertion.
  • 2016, Joachim Kügler, "The Bible and faith-based Homophobia/Homomisia in Africa", in The Bible and Violence in Africa
  • 2018 Spring, Nico Mostella, “What Does It Mean to Be Black & Queer?”, in Uhuru Magazine, Kent, Ohio: Kent State University, page 11:
    [Jordin Manning:] Not everybody is gonna know that I go by they/them pronouns, but there are other people who just have an aversion, or what I have known to be called as, transmisia or homomisia (-misia means aversion,) as opposed to phobia, to not further stigmatize people who have legit phobias.

hatred of those who are the same (gender) as the hater

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  • 2007 May 30, Andrew Penner and Harold Jose Toro-Tulla (Department of Sociology, University of California, Berkeley), Homophily or homomisia: owner gender and gender wage inequality in small business