See also: Judaeophobic

English

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Adjective

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Judæophobic (not comparable)

  1. obsolete typography of Judaeophobic
    • 1925, The Jewish Encyclopedia: A Descriptive Record of the History, Religion, Literature, and Customs of the Jewish People from the Earliest Times to the Present Day[1], volume II, New York: Funk and Wagnalls Company, page 7:
      It was at Rhodes, no doubt, that Apollonius appropriated the Judæophobic ideas of the Syrian stoic POSIDONIUS (135–51 B.C.), who lived in that city, and thence circulated throughout the Greek and Roman world several wild calumnies concerning the Jews, such as the charges that they worshiped an ass in their temple, that they sacrificed annually on their altar a specially fattened Greek, and that they were filled with hatred toward every other nationality, particularly the Greeks.
    • 1940, The Menorah Journal[2], volume 28, Intercollegiate Menorah Association, page 140:
      The sun has risen; and the sun has set;
      Rise again, again descended, yet
      To‐morrow no bright sun may rise to throw
      Rays of inductive reason on Judæophobic foe.