WhatâÂÂs the adjective form of âÂÂodaxelagniaâÂÂ?
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All I can think of is âÂÂodaxelagniacâ like âÂÂmaniaâ and âÂÂmaniacâ but IâÂÂm not positive.
Edit: WhatâÂÂs the word, if one exists, for someone who suffers from odaxelagnia, a form of paraphilia? Also, is âÂÂparaphiliacâ a word?
grammar adjectives
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All I can think of is âÂÂodaxelagniacâ like âÂÂmaniaâ and âÂÂmaniacâ but IâÂÂm not positive.
Edit: WhatâÂÂs the word, if one exists, for someone who suffers from odaxelagnia, a form of paraphilia? Also, is âÂÂparaphiliacâ a word?
grammar adjectives
New contributor
1
This is dictionary stuff, surely?
â BillJ
10 hours ago
1
Looks up word she has never heard before...
â Mari-Lou A
10 hours ago
2
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Odaxelagnia
â Mari-Lou A
10 hours ago
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up vote
5
down vote
favorite
up vote
5
down vote
favorite
All I can think of is âÂÂodaxelagniacâ like âÂÂmaniaâ and âÂÂmaniacâ but IâÂÂm not positive.
Edit: WhatâÂÂs the word, if one exists, for someone who suffers from odaxelagnia, a form of paraphilia? Also, is âÂÂparaphiliacâ a word?
grammar adjectives
New contributor
All I can think of is âÂÂodaxelagniacâ like âÂÂmaniaâ and âÂÂmaniacâ but IâÂÂm not positive.
Edit: WhatâÂÂs the word, if one exists, for someone who suffers from odaxelagnia, a form of paraphilia? Also, is âÂÂparaphiliacâ a word?
grammar adjectives
grammar adjectives
New contributor
New contributor
edited 19 mins ago
Glorfindel
3,99372434
3,99372434
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asked 11 hours ago
Zach Witt
262
262
New contributor
New contributor
1
This is dictionary stuff, surely?
â BillJ
10 hours ago
1
Looks up word she has never heard before...
â Mari-Lou A
10 hours ago
2
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Odaxelagnia
â Mari-Lou A
10 hours ago
add a comment |Â
1
This is dictionary stuff, surely?
â BillJ
10 hours ago
1
Looks up word she has never heard before...
â Mari-Lou A
10 hours ago
2
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Odaxelagnia
â Mari-Lou A
10 hours ago
1
1
This is dictionary stuff, surely?
â BillJ
10 hours ago
This is dictionary stuff, surely?
â BillJ
10 hours ago
1
1
Looks up word she has never heard before...
â Mari-Lou A
10 hours ago
Looks up word she has never heard before...
â Mari-Lou A
10 hours ago
2
2
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Odaxelagnia
â Mari-Lou A
10 hours ago
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Odaxelagnia
â Mari-Lou A
10 hours ago
add a comment |Â
3 Answers
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There are a few paraphilias that end with the greek suffix -lagnia. This is actually hard to look up because the dictionaries only consistently list one as far as I can tell, that is algolagnia.
algolagnia
n.
Sexual gratification derived from inflicting or
experiencing pain.
alâ²go÷lagâ²nic adj.
alâ²go÷lagâ²nist n.
American
Heritage Dictionary
n
(Psychiatry) a perversion in which sexual pleasure is gained
from the experience or infliction of pain.
ÃÂalgoÃÂlagnic adj
ÃÂalgoÃÂlagnist n
Collins English Dictionary
n.
sexual pleasure derived from enduring or inflicting pain, as in
masochism or sadism.
algoâ¢lagâ²nic, adj.
al`goâ¢lagâ²nist, n.
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary
Collins English Dictionary gives "algolagniac" as noun.
algolagniac
n
another word for algolagnist
Collins
English Dictionary
From Merriam-Webster we get the noun for the person "algolagniac"
algolagnia
: a perversion (such as sadism or masochism)
characterized by pleasure and especially sexual gratification in
inflicting or suffering pain.
algolagniac noun
And further down on the page we also get:
algolagnic adj
In Oxford Living Dictionaries in addition to algolagnia we get:
algolagnic
adjective & noun
(strange? probably not, see below for -ic endings being both noun and adjective)
and
algolagniac noun
A person who practises algolagnia, a sadomasochist.
Oxford Living Dictionaries
OK, now this gets very weird. My claim is that the word for a person who has one of these paraphilias is mostly the word that ends in -iac. However note that American Heritage Dictionary, Merriam-Webster and Oxford Living Dictionaries list "paraphilic" and "amnesic" as both adjective and noun, and both "paraphiliac" and "amnesiac" as both adjective and noun. How confusing is that? However searches for "amnesic who" and amnesiac who" - and "paraphilic who" and "paraphiliac who" - both show that the -iac ending word is more common for referring to people with the condition.
However a person with narcolepsy or schizophrenia is a "narcoleptic" or "schizophrenic", not "narcoleptiac" or "schizophreniac". We can be sure that a person with a condition of mania, egomania, kleptomania, pyromania has a word ending in -maniac. Paranoiac is listed in dictionaries as both a noun and adjective, with Merriam-Webster also listing "paranoic" as an alternative. I can't make heads or tails out of these rules.
My suggestion, based on what I've seen and due to the fact that these are obscure terms, would be to use:
odaxelagnia as the noun for the condition (for obvious reasons)
odaxelagniac as the noun for the person with the condition (modelled on paraphiliac and amnesiac, and also to disambiguate it from the -ic suffix which is often an adjective)
As for the adjective for the person with the condition, I'm not completely sure. All the dictionaries I've checked do not list "algolagnistic", so I'd be tempted to suggest simply what the dictionaries say, to use "odaxelagnist". However the word "algolagnistic" does come up in searches, and I feel that naturally one might be disposed to use this following the pattern of "masochist"/"masochistic" and all the other words ending in -ist. Also the addition of -ic to -ist to form suffix -istic is a very natural and intuitive use of a common English morpheme:
fascist/fascistic
nationalist/nationalistic
misogynist/misogynistic
hedonist/hedonistic
pacifist/pacifistic
Where the word ending in -ist is a noun denoting a person and the -istic is the adjective.
Based on this, even though the suffix -lagnistic isn't listed in dictionaries, you may want to use this. These are such specific words that the majority of paraphilias don't even appear in dictionaries.
add a comment |Â
up vote
3
down vote
You have, odaxetic
- (adjective) Referring to a sensation of biting or itching; it is not used in the working medical parlance.
The Free Dictionary
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"odaxelagniac" definitely has been used, but it looks more like a noun to me
It seems to me that, even though -ac is etymologically an adjective suffix, odaxelagniac would be more likely to be used as a noun referring to someone with odaxelagnia.
So in fact, I don't think the answer to the question in your title ("WhatâÂÂs is the adjective form of âÂÂodaxelagniaâÂÂ?") is the same as the answer to the question in the body of your post ("WhatâÂÂs the word, if one exists, for someone who suffers from odaxelagnia, a form of paraphilia?"). I think a sentence like "He/she is an odaxelagniac" (with a predicate noun) would be more likely than either "He/she is odaxelagniac" or "He/she is odaxelagnistic" as a way of expressing the idea "He/she suffers from odaxelagnia".
Compare the usage of maniac: I'm pretty sure that people say things like "He's a maniac!" more frequently than they say things like "He's maniac!"
A complication: even if I am right in saying that maniac (along with -iac words in general) is rare as a predicate adjective, it does seem to occur fairly frequently in attributive position before a noun (e.g. "the maniac driver"). It's not clear that the word is actually an adjective in this context, because either nouns or adjectives can be used before nouns in English (compare "the frog prince").
Using Google search, I was able to find various examples of "odaxelagniac" being used as a noun and being used as an attributive word (I'm not sure whether a noun or an adjective) before a noun.
Noun examples:
"I'm an odaxelagniac It means I get sexual arousal from biting"
(Whisper.sh)
You bit like an odaxelagniac's boyfriend!
(in comment posted by
venomlash
on September 25, 2015 at 4:11 PM on the Stranger article "The Morning News: After Yesterday's Fatal Crash, Renewed Questions about Ride the Ducks and the Aurora Bridge", by Heidi Groover, Sep 25, 2015 at 9:00 am)
Attributive examples:
"...just like that teenager I yelled at last week wasn't an odaxelagniac creep"
("Paranoia", by MistressMacha, published Aug 3, 2011 on fanfiction.net)
Yeah, you're right. I'm always seeing promicuous girls around here calling themselves odaxelagniac retifists. It's a plauge.
*/sarcasm*(Posted June 15, 2008 by Hallucigenia in "Tila Tequila calls Herself an Asexual!?", on The Asexual Visibility & Education Network Forums)
I didn't find any examples of sentences where "odaxelagniac" was used as a predicative adjective (e.g. no examples like "I am odaxelagniac", "He/she is odaxelagniac", "They/we/you are odaxelagniac").
"odaxelagnistic" seems like it would be a "correctly" formed adjective corresponding to odaxelagnia, but I don't think it has been used yet, and I don't know if it would be a good choice to refer to an individual with odaxelagnia
If for whatever reason you want a word related to odaxelagnia that is definitely an adjective and not a noun, I think the most likely formation would be odaxelagnistic, although I can't find any evidence of it being used yet.
The Oxford English Dictionary has an entry for the adjective algolagnistic, which it says is from "algolagnia n. + -istic suffix, after German algolagnistisch (1892)." It is defined as
Of, relating to, or characterized by algolagnia; sadomasochistic.
Although I can't find a dictionary with entries for urolagnistic or coprolagnistic, Google search turns up a few examples of these adjectives.
The example sentences in OED entry for algolagnistic suggest to me that adjectives of this type tend to be used to refer to behaviors or inclinations rather than to individuals:
- 1895 C. G. Chaddock tr. A. P. F. von Schrenck-Notzing Therapeutic Suggestion ix. 175 Very often we find that algolagnistic inclinations arise at the sight of boys being whipped at school.
- 1908 E. Paul tr. I. Bloch Sexual Life of our Time xxi. 558 De Sade..collected almost all the facts..regarding algolagnistic phenomena [Ger. algolagnistischen Erscheinungen] in ethnology.
- 1914 Med. Standard Aug. 301/1 Algolagnistic manifestations are frequently the result of a lack of familiarity with the facts of science, abnormal educational or religious influences, [etc.].
"odaxelagnic" also seems like it would be a "correctly" formed adjective
As Janus Bahs Jacquet mentioned in a comment, it also seems like -ic should work as an adjective suffix in this context. Even though "algolagnic" has no no OED entry, there are a number of hits for it on Google Books, some of which correspond to adjective uses. By analogy, it should be possible to use "odaxelagnic" as an adjective.
2
Using mania as a template, one would expect the normal adjective to be odaxelagnic. This doesnâÂÂt have much currency either, it seems, and from a simple Google search, it too seems to be mostly used as a noun, which I find surprising.
â Janus Bahs Jacquet
9 hours ago
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3 Answers
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
6
down vote
There are a few paraphilias that end with the greek suffix -lagnia. This is actually hard to look up because the dictionaries only consistently list one as far as I can tell, that is algolagnia.
algolagnia
n.
Sexual gratification derived from inflicting or
experiencing pain.
alâ²go÷lagâ²nic adj.
alâ²go÷lagâ²nist n.
American
Heritage Dictionary
n
(Psychiatry) a perversion in which sexual pleasure is gained
from the experience or infliction of pain.
ÃÂalgoÃÂlagnic adj
ÃÂalgoÃÂlagnist n
Collins English Dictionary
n.
sexual pleasure derived from enduring or inflicting pain, as in
masochism or sadism.
algoâ¢lagâ²nic, adj.
al`goâ¢lagâ²nist, n.
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary
Collins English Dictionary gives "algolagniac" as noun.
algolagniac
n
another word for algolagnist
Collins
English Dictionary
From Merriam-Webster we get the noun for the person "algolagniac"
algolagnia
: a perversion (such as sadism or masochism)
characterized by pleasure and especially sexual gratification in
inflicting or suffering pain.
algolagniac noun
And further down on the page we also get:
algolagnic adj
In Oxford Living Dictionaries in addition to algolagnia we get:
algolagnic
adjective & noun
(strange? probably not, see below for -ic endings being both noun and adjective)
and
algolagniac noun
A person who practises algolagnia, a sadomasochist.
Oxford Living Dictionaries
OK, now this gets very weird. My claim is that the word for a person who has one of these paraphilias is mostly the word that ends in -iac. However note that American Heritage Dictionary, Merriam-Webster and Oxford Living Dictionaries list "paraphilic" and "amnesic" as both adjective and noun, and both "paraphiliac" and "amnesiac" as both adjective and noun. How confusing is that? However searches for "amnesic who" and amnesiac who" - and "paraphilic who" and "paraphiliac who" - both show that the -iac ending word is more common for referring to people with the condition.
However a person with narcolepsy or schizophrenia is a "narcoleptic" or "schizophrenic", not "narcoleptiac" or "schizophreniac". We can be sure that a person with a condition of mania, egomania, kleptomania, pyromania has a word ending in -maniac. Paranoiac is listed in dictionaries as both a noun and adjective, with Merriam-Webster also listing "paranoic" as an alternative. I can't make heads or tails out of these rules.
My suggestion, based on what I've seen and due to the fact that these are obscure terms, would be to use:
odaxelagnia as the noun for the condition (for obvious reasons)
odaxelagniac as the noun for the person with the condition (modelled on paraphiliac and amnesiac, and also to disambiguate it from the -ic suffix which is often an adjective)
As for the adjective for the person with the condition, I'm not completely sure. All the dictionaries I've checked do not list "algolagnistic", so I'd be tempted to suggest simply what the dictionaries say, to use "odaxelagnist". However the word "algolagnistic" does come up in searches, and I feel that naturally one might be disposed to use this following the pattern of "masochist"/"masochistic" and all the other words ending in -ist. Also the addition of -ic to -ist to form suffix -istic is a very natural and intuitive use of a common English morpheme:
fascist/fascistic
nationalist/nationalistic
misogynist/misogynistic
hedonist/hedonistic
pacifist/pacifistic
Where the word ending in -ist is a noun denoting a person and the -istic is the adjective.
Based on this, even though the suffix -lagnistic isn't listed in dictionaries, you may want to use this. These are such specific words that the majority of paraphilias don't even appear in dictionaries.
add a comment |Â
up vote
6
down vote
There are a few paraphilias that end with the greek suffix -lagnia. This is actually hard to look up because the dictionaries only consistently list one as far as I can tell, that is algolagnia.
algolagnia
n.
Sexual gratification derived from inflicting or
experiencing pain.
alâ²go÷lagâ²nic adj.
alâ²go÷lagâ²nist n.
American
Heritage Dictionary
n
(Psychiatry) a perversion in which sexual pleasure is gained
from the experience or infliction of pain.
ÃÂalgoÃÂlagnic adj
ÃÂalgoÃÂlagnist n
Collins English Dictionary
n.
sexual pleasure derived from enduring or inflicting pain, as in
masochism or sadism.
algoâ¢lagâ²nic, adj.
al`goâ¢lagâ²nist, n.
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary
Collins English Dictionary gives "algolagniac" as noun.
algolagniac
n
another word for algolagnist
Collins
English Dictionary
From Merriam-Webster we get the noun for the person "algolagniac"
algolagnia
: a perversion (such as sadism or masochism)
characterized by pleasure and especially sexual gratification in
inflicting or suffering pain.
algolagniac noun
And further down on the page we also get:
algolagnic adj
In Oxford Living Dictionaries in addition to algolagnia we get:
algolagnic
adjective & noun
(strange? probably not, see below for -ic endings being both noun and adjective)
and
algolagniac noun
A person who practises algolagnia, a sadomasochist.
Oxford Living Dictionaries
OK, now this gets very weird. My claim is that the word for a person who has one of these paraphilias is mostly the word that ends in -iac. However note that American Heritage Dictionary, Merriam-Webster and Oxford Living Dictionaries list "paraphilic" and "amnesic" as both adjective and noun, and both "paraphiliac" and "amnesiac" as both adjective and noun. How confusing is that? However searches for "amnesic who" and amnesiac who" - and "paraphilic who" and "paraphiliac who" - both show that the -iac ending word is more common for referring to people with the condition.
However a person with narcolepsy or schizophrenia is a "narcoleptic" or "schizophrenic", not "narcoleptiac" or "schizophreniac". We can be sure that a person with a condition of mania, egomania, kleptomania, pyromania has a word ending in -maniac. Paranoiac is listed in dictionaries as both a noun and adjective, with Merriam-Webster also listing "paranoic" as an alternative. I can't make heads or tails out of these rules.
My suggestion, based on what I've seen and due to the fact that these are obscure terms, would be to use:
odaxelagnia as the noun for the condition (for obvious reasons)
odaxelagniac as the noun for the person with the condition (modelled on paraphiliac and amnesiac, and also to disambiguate it from the -ic suffix which is often an adjective)
As for the adjective for the person with the condition, I'm not completely sure. All the dictionaries I've checked do not list "algolagnistic", so I'd be tempted to suggest simply what the dictionaries say, to use "odaxelagnist". However the word "algolagnistic" does come up in searches, and I feel that naturally one might be disposed to use this following the pattern of "masochist"/"masochistic" and all the other words ending in -ist. Also the addition of -ic to -ist to form suffix -istic is a very natural and intuitive use of a common English morpheme:
fascist/fascistic
nationalist/nationalistic
misogynist/misogynistic
hedonist/hedonistic
pacifist/pacifistic
Where the word ending in -ist is a noun denoting a person and the -istic is the adjective.
Based on this, even though the suffix -lagnistic isn't listed in dictionaries, you may want to use this. These are such specific words that the majority of paraphilias don't even appear in dictionaries.
add a comment |Â
up vote
6
down vote
up vote
6
down vote
There are a few paraphilias that end with the greek suffix -lagnia. This is actually hard to look up because the dictionaries only consistently list one as far as I can tell, that is algolagnia.
algolagnia
n.
Sexual gratification derived from inflicting or
experiencing pain.
alâ²go÷lagâ²nic adj.
alâ²go÷lagâ²nist n.
American
Heritage Dictionary
n
(Psychiatry) a perversion in which sexual pleasure is gained
from the experience or infliction of pain.
ÃÂalgoÃÂlagnic adj
ÃÂalgoÃÂlagnist n
Collins English Dictionary
n.
sexual pleasure derived from enduring or inflicting pain, as in
masochism or sadism.
algoâ¢lagâ²nic, adj.
al`goâ¢lagâ²nist, n.
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary
Collins English Dictionary gives "algolagniac" as noun.
algolagniac
n
another word for algolagnist
Collins
English Dictionary
From Merriam-Webster we get the noun for the person "algolagniac"
algolagnia
: a perversion (such as sadism or masochism)
characterized by pleasure and especially sexual gratification in
inflicting or suffering pain.
algolagniac noun
And further down on the page we also get:
algolagnic adj
In Oxford Living Dictionaries in addition to algolagnia we get:
algolagnic
adjective & noun
(strange? probably not, see below for -ic endings being both noun and adjective)
and
algolagniac noun
A person who practises algolagnia, a sadomasochist.
Oxford Living Dictionaries
OK, now this gets very weird. My claim is that the word for a person who has one of these paraphilias is mostly the word that ends in -iac. However note that American Heritage Dictionary, Merriam-Webster and Oxford Living Dictionaries list "paraphilic" and "amnesic" as both adjective and noun, and both "paraphiliac" and "amnesiac" as both adjective and noun. How confusing is that? However searches for "amnesic who" and amnesiac who" - and "paraphilic who" and "paraphiliac who" - both show that the -iac ending word is more common for referring to people with the condition.
However a person with narcolepsy or schizophrenia is a "narcoleptic" or "schizophrenic", not "narcoleptiac" or "schizophreniac". We can be sure that a person with a condition of mania, egomania, kleptomania, pyromania has a word ending in -maniac. Paranoiac is listed in dictionaries as both a noun and adjective, with Merriam-Webster also listing "paranoic" as an alternative. I can't make heads or tails out of these rules.
My suggestion, based on what I've seen and due to the fact that these are obscure terms, would be to use:
odaxelagnia as the noun for the condition (for obvious reasons)
odaxelagniac as the noun for the person with the condition (modelled on paraphiliac and amnesiac, and also to disambiguate it from the -ic suffix which is often an adjective)
As for the adjective for the person with the condition, I'm not completely sure. All the dictionaries I've checked do not list "algolagnistic", so I'd be tempted to suggest simply what the dictionaries say, to use "odaxelagnist". However the word "algolagnistic" does come up in searches, and I feel that naturally one might be disposed to use this following the pattern of "masochist"/"masochistic" and all the other words ending in -ist. Also the addition of -ic to -ist to form suffix -istic is a very natural and intuitive use of a common English morpheme:
fascist/fascistic
nationalist/nationalistic
misogynist/misogynistic
hedonist/hedonistic
pacifist/pacifistic
Where the word ending in -ist is a noun denoting a person and the -istic is the adjective.
Based on this, even though the suffix -lagnistic isn't listed in dictionaries, you may want to use this. These are such specific words that the majority of paraphilias don't even appear in dictionaries.
There are a few paraphilias that end with the greek suffix -lagnia. This is actually hard to look up because the dictionaries only consistently list one as far as I can tell, that is algolagnia.
algolagnia
n.
Sexual gratification derived from inflicting or
experiencing pain.
alâ²go÷lagâ²nic adj.
alâ²go÷lagâ²nist n.
American
Heritage Dictionary
n
(Psychiatry) a perversion in which sexual pleasure is gained
from the experience or infliction of pain.
ÃÂalgoÃÂlagnic adj
ÃÂalgoÃÂlagnist n
Collins English Dictionary
n.
sexual pleasure derived from enduring or inflicting pain, as in
masochism or sadism.
algoâ¢lagâ²nic, adj.
al`goâ¢lagâ²nist, n.
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary
Collins English Dictionary gives "algolagniac" as noun.
algolagniac
n
another word for algolagnist
Collins
English Dictionary
From Merriam-Webster we get the noun for the person "algolagniac"
algolagnia
: a perversion (such as sadism or masochism)
characterized by pleasure and especially sexual gratification in
inflicting or suffering pain.
algolagniac noun
And further down on the page we also get:
algolagnic adj
In Oxford Living Dictionaries in addition to algolagnia we get:
algolagnic
adjective & noun
(strange? probably not, see below for -ic endings being both noun and adjective)
and
algolagniac noun
A person who practises algolagnia, a sadomasochist.
Oxford Living Dictionaries
OK, now this gets very weird. My claim is that the word for a person who has one of these paraphilias is mostly the word that ends in -iac. However note that American Heritage Dictionary, Merriam-Webster and Oxford Living Dictionaries list "paraphilic" and "amnesic" as both adjective and noun, and both "paraphiliac" and "amnesiac" as both adjective and noun. How confusing is that? However searches for "amnesic who" and amnesiac who" - and "paraphilic who" and "paraphiliac who" - both show that the -iac ending word is more common for referring to people with the condition.
However a person with narcolepsy or schizophrenia is a "narcoleptic" or "schizophrenic", not "narcoleptiac" or "schizophreniac". We can be sure that a person with a condition of mania, egomania, kleptomania, pyromania has a word ending in -maniac. Paranoiac is listed in dictionaries as both a noun and adjective, with Merriam-Webster also listing "paranoic" as an alternative. I can't make heads or tails out of these rules.
My suggestion, based on what I've seen and due to the fact that these are obscure terms, would be to use:
odaxelagnia as the noun for the condition (for obvious reasons)
odaxelagniac as the noun for the person with the condition (modelled on paraphiliac and amnesiac, and also to disambiguate it from the -ic suffix which is often an adjective)
As for the adjective for the person with the condition, I'm not completely sure. All the dictionaries I've checked do not list "algolagnistic", so I'd be tempted to suggest simply what the dictionaries say, to use "odaxelagnist". However the word "algolagnistic" does come up in searches, and I feel that naturally one might be disposed to use this following the pattern of "masochist"/"masochistic" and all the other words ending in -ist. Also the addition of -ic to -ist to form suffix -istic is a very natural and intuitive use of a common English morpheme:
fascist/fascistic
nationalist/nationalistic
misogynist/misogynistic
hedonist/hedonistic
pacifist/pacifistic
Where the word ending in -ist is a noun denoting a person and the -istic is the adjective.
Based on this, even though the suffix -lagnistic isn't listed in dictionaries, you may want to use this. These are such specific words that the majority of paraphilias don't even appear in dictionaries.
edited 7 hours ago
answered 8 hours ago
Zebrafish
6,0251627
6,0251627
add a comment |Â
add a comment |Â
up vote
3
down vote
You have, odaxetic
- (adjective) Referring to a sensation of biting or itching; it is not used in the working medical parlance.
The Free Dictionary
add a comment |Â
up vote
3
down vote
You have, odaxetic
- (adjective) Referring to a sensation of biting or itching; it is not used in the working medical parlance.
The Free Dictionary
add a comment |Â
up vote
3
down vote
up vote
3
down vote
You have, odaxetic
- (adjective) Referring to a sensation of biting or itching; it is not used in the working medical parlance.
The Free Dictionary
You have, odaxetic
- (adjective) Referring to a sensation of biting or itching; it is not used in the working medical parlance.
The Free Dictionary
answered 10 hours ago
user240918
19.4k851126
19.4k851126
add a comment |Â
add a comment |Â
up vote
2
down vote
"odaxelagniac" definitely has been used, but it looks more like a noun to me
It seems to me that, even though -ac is etymologically an adjective suffix, odaxelagniac would be more likely to be used as a noun referring to someone with odaxelagnia.
So in fact, I don't think the answer to the question in your title ("WhatâÂÂs is the adjective form of âÂÂodaxelagniaâÂÂ?") is the same as the answer to the question in the body of your post ("WhatâÂÂs the word, if one exists, for someone who suffers from odaxelagnia, a form of paraphilia?"). I think a sentence like "He/she is an odaxelagniac" (with a predicate noun) would be more likely than either "He/she is odaxelagniac" or "He/she is odaxelagnistic" as a way of expressing the idea "He/she suffers from odaxelagnia".
Compare the usage of maniac: I'm pretty sure that people say things like "He's a maniac!" more frequently than they say things like "He's maniac!"
A complication: even if I am right in saying that maniac (along with -iac words in general) is rare as a predicate adjective, it does seem to occur fairly frequently in attributive position before a noun (e.g. "the maniac driver"). It's not clear that the word is actually an adjective in this context, because either nouns or adjectives can be used before nouns in English (compare "the frog prince").
Using Google search, I was able to find various examples of "odaxelagniac" being used as a noun and being used as an attributive word (I'm not sure whether a noun or an adjective) before a noun.
Noun examples:
"I'm an odaxelagniac It means I get sexual arousal from biting"
(Whisper.sh)
You bit like an odaxelagniac's boyfriend!
(in comment posted by
venomlash
on September 25, 2015 at 4:11 PM on the Stranger article "The Morning News: After Yesterday's Fatal Crash, Renewed Questions about Ride the Ducks and the Aurora Bridge", by Heidi Groover, Sep 25, 2015 at 9:00 am)
Attributive examples:
"...just like that teenager I yelled at last week wasn't an odaxelagniac creep"
("Paranoia", by MistressMacha, published Aug 3, 2011 on fanfiction.net)
Yeah, you're right. I'm always seeing promicuous girls around here calling themselves odaxelagniac retifists. It's a plauge.
*/sarcasm*(Posted June 15, 2008 by Hallucigenia in "Tila Tequila calls Herself an Asexual!?", on The Asexual Visibility & Education Network Forums)
I didn't find any examples of sentences where "odaxelagniac" was used as a predicative adjective (e.g. no examples like "I am odaxelagniac", "He/she is odaxelagniac", "They/we/you are odaxelagniac").
"odaxelagnistic" seems like it would be a "correctly" formed adjective corresponding to odaxelagnia, but I don't think it has been used yet, and I don't know if it would be a good choice to refer to an individual with odaxelagnia
If for whatever reason you want a word related to odaxelagnia that is definitely an adjective and not a noun, I think the most likely formation would be odaxelagnistic, although I can't find any evidence of it being used yet.
The Oxford English Dictionary has an entry for the adjective algolagnistic, which it says is from "algolagnia n. + -istic suffix, after German algolagnistisch (1892)." It is defined as
Of, relating to, or characterized by algolagnia; sadomasochistic.
Although I can't find a dictionary with entries for urolagnistic or coprolagnistic, Google search turns up a few examples of these adjectives.
The example sentences in OED entry for algolagnistic suggest to me that adjectives of this type tend to be used to refer to behaviors or inclinations rather than to individuals:
- 1895 C. G. Chaddock tr. A. P. F. von Schrenck-Notzing Therapeutic Suggestion ix. 175 Very often we find that algolagnistic inclinations arise at the sight of boys being whipped at school.
- 1908 E. Paul tr. I. Bloch Sexual Life of our Time xxi. 558 De Sade..collected almost all the facts..regarding algolagnistic phenomena [Ger. algolagnistischen Erscheinungen] in ethnology.
- 1914 Med. Standard Aug. 301/1 Algolagnistic manifestations are frequently the result of a lack of familiarity with the facts of science, abnormal educational or religious influences, [etc.].
"odaxelagnic" also seems like it would be a "correctly" formed adjective
As Janus Bahs Jacquet mentioned in a comment, it also seems like -ic should work as an adjective suffix in this context. Even though "algolagnic" has no no OED entry, there are a number of hits for it on Google Books, some of which correspond to adjective uses. By analogy, it should be possible to use "odaxelagnic" as an adjective.
2
Using mania as a template, one would expect the normal adjective to be odaxelagnic. This doesnâÂÂt have much currency either, it seems, and from a simple Google search, it too seems to be mostly used as a noun, which I find surprising.
â Janus Bahs Jacquet
9 hours ago
add a comment |Â
up vote
2
down vote
"odaxelagniac" definitely has been used, but it looks more like a noun to me
It seems to me that, even though -ac is etymologically an adjective suffix, odaxelagniac would be more likely to be used as a noun referring to someone with odaxelagnia.
So in fact, I don't think the answer to the question in your title ("WhatâÂÂs is the adjective form of âÂÂodaxelagniaâÂÂ?") is the same as the answer to the question in the body of your post ("WhatâÂÂs the word, if one exists, for someone who suffers from odaxelagnia, a form of paraphilia?"). I think a sentence like "He/she is an odaxelagniac" (with a predicate noun) would be more likely than either "He/she is odaxelagniac" or "He/she is odaxelagnistic" as a way of expressing the idea "He/she suffers from odaxelagnia".
Compare the usage of maniac: I'm pretty sure that people say things like "He's a maniac!" more frequently than they say things like "He's maniac!"
A complication: even if I am right in saying that maniac (along with -iac words in general) is rare as a predicate adjective, it does seem to occur fairly frequently in attributive position before a noun (e.g. "the maniac driver"). It's not clear that the word is actually an adjective in this context, because either nouns or adjectives can be used before nouns in English (compare "the frog prince").
Using Google search, I was able to find various examples of "odaxelagniac" being used as a noun and being used as an attributive word (I'm not sure whether a noun or an adjective) before a noun.
Noun examples:
"I'm an odaxelagniac It means I get sexual arousal from biting"
(Whisper.sh)
You bit like an odaxelagniac's boyfriend!
(in comment posted by
venomlash
on September 25, 2015 at 4:11 PM on the Stranger article "The Morning News: After Yesterday's Fatal Crash, Renewed Questions about Ride the Ducks and the Aurora Bridge", by Heidi Groover, Sep 25, 2015 at 9:00 am)
Attributive examples:
"...just like that teenager I yelled at last week wasn't an odaxelagniac creep"
("Paranoia", by MistressMacha, published Aug 3, 2011 on fanfiction.net)
Yeah, you're right. I'm always seeing promicuous girls around here calling themselves odaxelagniac retifists. It's a plauge.
*/sarcasm*(Posted June 15, 2008 by Hallucigenia in "Tila Tequila calls Herself an Asexual!?", on The Asexual Visibility & Education Network Forums)
I didn't find any examples of sentences where "odaxelagniac" was used as a predicative adjective (e.g. no examples like "I am odaxelagniac", "He/she is odaxelagniac", "They/we/you are odaxelagniac").
"odaxelagnistic" seems like it would be a "correctly" formed adjective corresponding to odaxelagnia, but I don't think it has been used yet, and I don't know if it would be a good choice to refer to an individual with odaxelagnia
If for whatever reason you want a word related to odaxelagnia that is definitely an adjective and not a noun, I think the most likely formation would be odaxelagnistic, although I can't find any evidence of it being used yet.
The Oxford English Dictionary has an entry for the adjective algolagnistic, which it says is from "algolagnia n. + -istic suffix, after German algolagnistisch (1892)." It is defined as
Of, relating to, or characterized by algolagnia; sadomasochistic.
Although I can't find a dictionary with entries for urolagnistic or coprolagnistic, Google search turns up a few examples of these adjectives.
The example sentences in OED entry for algolagnistic suggest to me that adjectives of this type tend to be used to refer to behaviors or inclinations rather than to individuals:
- 1895 C. G. Chaddock tr. A. P. F. von Schrenck-Notzing Therapeutic Suggestion ix. 175 Very often we find that algolagnistic inclinations arise at the sight of boys being whipped at school.
- 1908 E. Paul tr. I. Bloch Sexual Life of our Time xxi. 558 De Sade..collected almost all the facts..regarding algolagnistic phenomena [Ger. algolagnistischen Erscheinungen] in ethnology.
- 1914 Med. Standard Aug. 301/1 Algolagnistic manifestations are frequently the result of a lack of familiarity with the facts of science, abnormal educational or religious influences, [etc.].
"odaxelagnic" also seems like it would be a "correctly" formed adjective
As Janus Bahs Jacquet mentioned in a comment, it also seems like -ic should work as an adjective suffix in this context. Even though "algolagnic" has no no OED entry, there are a number of hits for it on Google Books, some of which correspond to adjective uses. By analogy, it should be possible to use "odaxelagnic" as an adjective.
2
Using mania as a template, one would expect the normal adjective to be odaxelagnic. This doesnâÂÂt have much currency either, it seems, and from a simple Google search, it too seems to be mostly used as a noun, which I find surprising.
â Janus Bahs Jacquet
9 hours ago
add a comment |Â
up vote
2
down vote
up vote
2
down vote
"odaxelagniac" definitely has been used, but it looks more like a noun to me
It seems to me that, even though -ac is etymologically an adjective suffix, odaxelagniac would be more likely to be used as a noun referring to someone with odaxelagnia.
So in fact, I don't think the answer to the question in your title ("WhatâÂÂs is the adjective form of âÂÂodaxelagniaâÂÂ?") is the same as the answer to the question in the body of your post ("WhatâÂÂs the word, if one exists, for someone who suffers from odaxelagnia, a form of paraphilia?"). I think a sentence like "He/she is an odaxelagniac" (with a predicate noun) would be more likely than either "He/she is odaxelagniac" or "He/she is odaxelagnistic" as a way of expressing the idea "He/she suffers from odaxelagnia".
Compare the usage of maniac: I'm pretty sure that people say things like "He's a maniac!" more frequently than they say things like "He's maniac!"
A complication: even if I am right in saying that maniac (along with -iac words in general) is rare as a predicate adjective, it does seem to occur fairly frequently in attributive position before a noun (e.g. "the maniac driver"). It's not clear that the word is actually an adjective in this context, because either nouns or adjectives can be used before nouns in English (compare "the frog prince").
Using Google search, I was able to find various examples of "odaxelagniac" being used as a noun and being used as an attributive word (I'm not sure whether a noun or an adjective) before a noun.
Noun examples:
"I'm an odaxelagniac It means I get sexual arousal from biting"
(Whisper.sh)
You bit like an odaxelagniac's boyfriend!
(in comment posted by
venomlash
on September 25, 2015 at 4:11 PM on the Stranger article "The Morning News: After Yesterday's Fatal Crash, Renewed Questions about Ride the Ducks and the Aurora Bridge", by Heidi Groover, Sep 25, 2015 at 9:00 am)
Attributive examples:
"...just like that teenager I yelled at last week wasn't an odaxelagniac creep"
("Paranoia", by MistressMacha, published Aug 3, 2011 on fanfiction.net)
Yeah, you're right. I'm always seeing promicuous girls around here calling themselves odaxelagniac retifists. It's a plauge.
*/sarcasm*(Posted June 15, 2008 by Hallucigenia in "Tila Tequila calls Herself an Asexual!?", on The Asexual Visibility & Education Network Forums)
I didn't find any examples of sentences where "odaxelagniac" was used as a predicative adjective (e.g. no examples like "I am odaxelagniac", "He/she is odaxelagniac", "They/we/you are odaxelagniac").
"odaxelagnistic" seems like it would be a "correctly" formed adjective corresponding to odaxelagnia, but I don't think it has been used yet, and I don't know if it would be a good choice to refer to an individual with odaxelagnia
If for whatever reason you want a word related to odaxelagnia that is definitely an adjective and not a noun, I think the most likely formation would be odaxelagnistic, although I can't find any evidence of it being used yet.
The Oxford English Dictionary has an entry for the adjective algolagnistic, which it says is from "algolagnia n. + -istic suffix, after German algolagnistisch (1892)." It is defined as
Of, relating to, or characterized by algolagnia; sadomasochistic.
Although I can't find a dictionary with entries for urolagnistic or coprolagnistic, Google search turns up a few examples of these adjectives.
The example sentences in OED entry for algolagnistic suggest to me that adjectives of this type tend to be used to refer to behaviors or inclinations rather than to individuals:
- 1895 C. G. Chaddock tr. A. P. F. von Schrenck-Notzing Therapeutic Suggestion ix. 175 Very often we find that algolagnistic inclinations arise at the sight of boys being whipped at school.
- 1908 E. Paul tr. I. Bloch Sexual Life of our Time xxi. 558 De Sade..collected almost all the facts..regarding algolagnistic phenomena [Ger. algolagnistischen Erscheinungen] in ethnology.
- 1914 Med. Standard Aug. 301/1 Algolagnistic manifestations are frequently the result of a lack of familiarity with the facts of science, abnormal educational or religious influences, [etc.].
"odaxelagnic" also seems like it would be a "correctly" formed adjective
As Janus Bahs Jacquet mentioned in a comment, it also seems like -ic should work as an adjective suffix in this context. Even though "algolagnic" has no no OED entry, there are a number of hits for it on Google Books, some of which correspond to adjective uses. By analogy, it should be possible to use "odaxelagnic" as an adjective.
"odaxelagniac" definitely has been used, but it looks more like a noun to me
It seems to me that, even though -ac is etymologically an adjective suffix, odaxelagniac would be more likely to be used as a noun referring to someone with odaxelagnia.
So in fact, I don't think the answer to the question in your title ("WhatâÂÂs is the adjective form of âÂÂodaxelagniaâÂÂ?") is the same as the answer to the question in the body of your post ("WhatâÂÂs the word, if one exists, for someone who suffers from odaxelagnia, a form of paraphilia?"). I think a sentence like "He/she is an odaxelagniac" (with a predicate noun) would be more likely than either "He/she is odaxelagniac" or "He/she is odaxelagnistic" as a way of expressing the idea "He/she suffers from odaxelagnia".
Compare the usage of maniac: I'm pretty sure that people say things like "He's a maniac!" more frequently than they say things like "He's maniac!"
A complication: even if I am right in saying that maniac (along with -iac words in general) is rare as a predicate adjective, it does seem to occur fairly frequently in attributive position before a noun (e.g. "the maniac driver"). It's not clear that the word is actually an adjective in this context, because either nouns or adjectives can be used before nouns in English (compare "the frog prince").
Using Google search, I was able to find various examples of "odaxelagniac" being used as a noun and being used as an attributive word (I'm not sure whether a noun or an adjective) before a noun.
Noun examples:
"I'm an odaxelagniac It means I get sexual arousal from biting"
(Whisper.sh)
You bit like an odaxelagniac's boyfriend!
(in comment posted by
venomlash
on September 25, 2015 at 4:11 PM on the Stranger article "The Morning News: After Yesterday's Fatal Crash, Renewed Questions about Ride the Ducks and the Aurora Bridge", by Heidi Groover, Sep 25, 2015 at 9:00 am)
Attributive examples:
"...just like that teenager I yelled at last week wasn't an odaxelagniac creep"
("Paranoia", by MistressMacha, published Aug 3, 2011 on fanfiction.net)
Yeah, you're right. I'm always seeing promicuous girls around here calling themselves odaxelagniac retifists. It's a plauge.
*/sarcasm*(Posted June 15, 2008 by Hallucigenia in "Tila Tequila calls Herself an Asexual!?", on The Asexual Visibility & Education Network Forums)
I didn't find any examples of sentences where "odaxelagniac" was used as a predicative adjective (e.g. no examples like "I am odaxelagniac", "He/she is odaxelagniac", "They/we/you are odaxelagniac").
"odaxelagnistic" seems like it would be a "correctly" formed adjective corresponding to odaxelagnia, but I don't think it has been used yet, and I don't know if it would be a good choice to refer to an individual with odaxelagnia
If for whatever reason you want a word related to odaxelagnia that is definitely an adjective and not a noun, I think the most likely formation would be odaxelagnistic, although I can't find any evidence of it being used yet.
The Oxford English Dictionary has an entry for the adjective algolagnistic, which it says is from "algolagnia n. + -istic suffix, after German algolagnistisch (1892)." It is defined as
Of, relating to, or characterized by algolagnia; sadomasochistic.
Although I can't find a dictionary with entries for urolagnistic or coprolagnistic, Google search turns up a few examples of these adjectives.
The example sentences in OED entry for algolagnistic suggest to me that adjectives of this type tend to be used to refer to behaviors or inclinations rather than to individuals:
- 1895 C. G. Chaddock tr. A. P. F. von Schrenck-Notzing Therapeutic Suggestion ix. 175 Very often we find that algolagnistic inclinations arise at the sight of boys being whipped at school.
- 1908 E. Paul tr. I. Bloch Sexual Life of our Time xxi. 558 De Sade..collected almost all the facts..regarding algolagnistic phenomena [Ger. algolagnistischen Erscheinungen] in ethnology.
- 1914 Med. Standard Aug. 301/1 Algolagnistic manifestations are frequently the result of a lack of familiarity with the facts of science, abnormal educational or religious influences, [etc.].
"odaxelagnic" also seems like it would be a "correctly" formed adjective
As Janus Bahs Jacquet mentioned in a comment, it also seems like -ic should work as an adjective suffix in this context. Even though "algolagnic" has no no OED entry, there are a number of hits for it on Google Books, some of which correspond to adjective uses. By analogy, it should be possible to use "odaxelagnic" as an adjective.
edited 9 hours ago
answered 10 hours ago
sumelic
42.7k6102202
42.7k6102202
2
Using mania as a template, one would expect the normal adjective to be odaxelagnic. This doesnâÂÂt have much currency either, it seems, and from a simple Google search, it too seems to be mostly used as a noun, which I find surprising.
â Janus Bahs Jacquet
9 hours ago
add a comment |Â
2
Using mania as a template, one would expect the normal adjective to be odaxelagnic. This doesnâÂÂt have much currency either, it seems, and from a simple Google search, it too seems to be mostly used as a noun, which I find surprising.
â Janus Bahs Jacquet
9 hours ago
2
2
Using mania as a template, one would expect the normal adjective to be odaxelagnic. This doesnâÂÂt have much currency either, it seems, and from a simple Google search, it too seems to be mostly used as a noun, which I find surprising.
â Janus Bahs Jacquet
9 hours ago
Using mania as a template, one would expect the normal adjective to be odaxelagnic. This doesnâÂÂt have much currency either, it seems, and from a simple Google search, it too seems to be mostly used as a noun, which I find surprising.
â Janus Bahs Jacquet
9 hours ago
add a comment |Â
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1
This is dictionary stuff, surely?
â BillJ
10 hours ago
1
Looks up word she has never heard before...
â Mari-Lou A
10 hours ago
2
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Odaxelagnia
â Mari-Lou A
10 hours ago