Teutonophobia

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English

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Etymology

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From Teutono- +‎ -phobia.

Noun

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Teutonophobia (uncountable)

  1. Alternative form of Teutophobia.
    • 1799 October 26, W. T., The Gentleman’s Magazine: and Historical Chronicle. [], volume LXIX, part the second, fifth number, London: [] John Nichols, []. And sold by Elizabeth Newbery, [], published November 1799, page 924:
      Having done due honour to Michaelis and his biblical aſſociates, I have the leſs compunction in pointing out the immeaſurable diſtance between a Klopſtock and a Milton, a Wieland and a Swift or a Voltaire, a Göthe and a Mackenzie; in fine, a Kotzebue and an Otway. In this liſt can I be accuſed of partiality? Can any be ſo blind, ſo taſteleſs, or ſo ignorant, as not to ſee, feel, and underſtand, the proud ſuperiority of the Engliſh name? And it is the fervent hope of my heart that, though we now labour under a temporary poverty of genius, poſterity will endeavour to wipe away our ſhame, and equal, though they cannot excel, their exalted anceſtors. Careleſs of the cenſure of the multitude, I glory in my Teutonophobia, and wiſh my poor efforts could extend the infection.
    • 1881, M[ountstuart] E[lphinstone] Grant Duff, “South Africa: An Unspoken Speech”, in John Morley, editor, The Fortnightly Review, volume XXX (new series) / XXXVI (old series), London: Chapman and Hall, Limited, [], page 314:
      The same kind of mind which has Russophobia on the brain in Asia would get Teutonophobia on the brain at the Cape.
    • 2023, Paul B. Stephan, “Cracks in the Foundation and System Shocks: Terror, the Great Recession, and the Arab Spring (2000–15)”, in The World Crisis and International Law: The Knowledge Economy and the Battle for the Future, Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, part I (The Rise and Fall of Liberal Internationalism and the New World Order), page 75:
      The PIGS’s financial problems had political as well as economic consequences. They had to submit to a demoralizing virtual receivership under the auspices of the European financial institutions and the IMF. Given the German backbone of the European financial system, considerable Teutonophobia and dissipation of the political consensus supporting the European Union ensued.