pogonophobia The term pogonophobia is gotten from the Greek words pogon for facial hair and phobos for fear.Its antonym would be "pogonophilia", that is the affection for stubbles or unshaven people. David Smith's 1851 distribution of The Covenanter of the Improved Presbyterian Church depicts the Jesuits of Baden as torment "a genuine pogonophobia at seeing a popularity based jaw." The term is by and large intended to be taken in a jovial vein.In the 1920s, clinician John B. Watson had the option to condition this trepidation in a young man through old style molding techniques. In August 2013, Christopher Oldstone-Moore, history speaker at Wright State College in Ohio, and creator of The Facial hair Development in Victorian England remarked, "Beard growth for as long as cen...
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