Phagy Words: pagophagia to zoophagous,
Part 4 of 4
Words that include: phago-, phag-, -phage, -phagi,
-phagic, -phagically, -phagia, -phagism, -phagist, -phagic,
-phagous, -phag (Greek: eat, eating, consume, ingest)
& nbsp;& nbsp;If you would like to take a self-scoring quiz over some of the words in this section, then click Phagy-Quiz which is located at the end of this set of definitions so you can see how much you know about these phagy words.
pagophagia, pagophagous, pagophagy:
The ingestion of extraordinary quantities of ice [frost], often related to a lack of iron in the blood.
pantophagist:
One who eats just about everything.
pantophagous, pantophagy:
Eating or requiring a variety of foods; eating both animal and vegetable matter; omnivorous.
pedophagous (Brit., paedophagous), pedophagy:
Feeding on embryos and the young stages of other species.
phagelysis:
The destructive or solvent action of phage [bacteriophage].
phagocyte:
Any cell capable of ingesting particulate matter.
phagocytosis:
The engulfing and ingesting of foreign particles or waste matter by phagocytes.
phagodynamometer:
An apparatus for measuring the force exerted in chewing food.
phagologist, phagology:
1. A specialist in eating and the study of eating or ingesting foods. 2. The subject of eating or feeding; dietetic.
phagolysis:
The destruction of phagocytes.
phagomania:
An insatiable hunger or craving for food, or an obsessive preoccupation with the subject of eating.
phagophobia:
An irrational fear of eating.
phagotherapy:
The treatment of an illness with specific kinds of food.
phagotrophic, phagotroph, phagotrophy:
Feeding by ingesting organic particulate matter; a reference to cells in the blood or body fluid that ingest foreign particles.
phagozoite:
An animal that feeds on disintegrating or dead tissue.
phthirophagous:
Eating lice.
phyllophagous, phayllophage, phyllophagy:
1. To feed on leaves. 2. A reference to plants that obtain nourishment from their leaves.
phytophagous, phytophage, phytophagy:
Feeding on plants or on plant material.
pleophagous, pleophage, pleophagy:
1. Feeding on a variety of food substances or food species. 2. A reference to a parasite associated with a variety of hosts.
pneumophagia:
The same as aerophagia; excessive swallowing of air, usually an unconscious process associated with anxiety, resulting in abdominal distention or belching, often interpreted by the patient as signs of a physical disorder, etc.
pollenophagous, pollenophage, pollenophagy:
Feeding on pollen.
poltophagy:
1. Ingesting porridge [an alteration of pottage; that is, cereal, such as oatmeal, boiled until thick and usually eaten with milk] or pottage [a thick vegetable, or meat and vegetable soup or stew]. 2. Thorough chewing of food.
polyphagia, polyphagous, polyphagy:
1. Eating many kinds of food or consuming a great variety of foods. 2. Excessive, compulsive, or a continuous desire to eat.
psomophagia, psomophagy:
1. To eat morsels or bits of food; such as, certain birds, fish, etc. From Greek, a morsel, bit. 2. In medicine, it is defined as, The practice of swallowing food without thorough mastication (without thoroughly chewing it). 3. A related term, flecherism, promotes taking small amounts of food at a time and chewing each small quantity for a prolonged period before swallowing. Promoted by, and named for, Horace Fletcher, U.S. dietitian, 1849-1919.
rhizophagous, rhizophagy:
1. Feeding on roots. 2. A reference to a plant that obtains nourishment through its own roots.
rhypophagous, rhypophagy:
The eating of filth, excrement, putrid matter, or refuse.
saprophagous, saprophagy:
Feeding on dead or decaying organic matter; biophagous.
sarcophagous, sarcophagus, sarcophagy:
1. Literally, eating or consuming flesh; flesh-eating. 2. From Greek, sarkophagos, through Latin, sarcophagus; so named because the limestone, in which people were buried, caused rapid disintegration or decomposition of the bodies. 3. Among the ancient Greeks and Romans, it was a limestone coffin or tomb, often instribed and ornamented. 4. Now, by extension, the term is used for any stone coffin, especially a large or monumental tomb.
saurophagous:
To eat lizards; the eating of lizards.
scatophagous, scatophagy:
1. To eat fecal matter or dung; as done by dung beetles or their larvae, other insects, etc. 2. The eating of filth or excrement by some people who are suffering from insanity.
scolecophagous, scolecophagy:
Eating worms.
sialoaerophagia, sialoaerophagy:
In medicine, the excessive or frequent swallowing of saliva and air which are taken into the stomach.
stenophagous, stenophagy, stenophage:
1. Utilizing only a limited variety of foods or food species. 2. An antonym of euryphagous.
sycophagous, sycophagy, sycophage:
Feeding on figs.
tachyphagia, tachyphagous, tachyphagy:
Extremely or excessively fast eating; the bolting or gobbling down of food.
tecnophagia, tecnophagous, tecnophagy:
A reference to species that eat their own eggs.
theophagite, theophagous, theophagy:
1. The eating of God (in the mass or communion rite). 2. In anthropology, the eating of meals at which the participants believe that they ingest a deity with the consecrated food.
thermophagy:
The consumption of excessively hot food.
trichophagia, trichophagy:
The practice or habit of biting or eating hair or wool.
xerophagia, xerophagy:
1. The eating of dry foodstuffs; subsisting on a dry diet. 2. A diet of bread and water. Actually, xerophagy refers to a type of religious fast in which the jejunator [the person who fasts] consumes only bread, salt, unseasoned vegetables, and water. Its strange that a word element [xero] which means dry, includes water.
xylophage, xylophagist, xylophagous, xylophagy:
1. The eating of wood; thriving on wood as a source of food; such as, certain molluscs, insects, and fungi. 2. Eating or boring into wood, as the larvae of certain insects.
zoophagous, zoophage, zoophagy:
Feeding on animals or animal matter; carnivorous.
& nbsp;& nbsp; You may take a self-scoring quiz over some of the words in this section by just clicking on Phagy Quiz #4 to check your word knowledge for this section.
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