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Veritaphobe

Veritaphobe (veh-ri-ta-fohb) - noun
A person who avoids doing their own credible research because they fear discovering facts that might contradict their existing beliefs or rhetoric.

Origin: From Latin veritas (“truth”) + Greek-derived suffix -phobe (“fear of”), coined to describe the tendency to avoid fact-based inquiry)
“He’s a veritaphobe — his opinions come from YouTube and X instead of being gathered from their own credible research.”
Veritaphobe by Ywg2002 November 8, 2025
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soggy vegitarian 

When a pussy tastes or looks like a piece of rotting wet coolly flower.
Damn Patricia I can't eat u out . You are a soggy vegitarian.(🍴)
Related Words

Obscura Veritatis 

The state in which every attempt at evidence and reasoning is refracted through political, cultural, social, and personal forces, thus a real logical truth is impossible to reach.
That's an Obscura Veritatis
Obscura Veritatis by 2100AD September 3, 2025

in typo veritas 

In typo there is truth. From "in vino veritas" (latin expression meaning "in wine there is truth").
A: I love your new cock
B: Whoa
A: I mean car
B: In typo veritas

in Versed veritas 

Derived from the Latin expression "in vino veritas" (in wine, truth). Describes the truth serum-like affect of Versed on a medical patient.
Dude1: "When the doctor gave me Versed before my surgery I started saying the weirdest things."

Dude2: "In Versed veritas!"

In celeritas veritas 

Truth in speed.
The quickest answer is the truest.
In an unguarded moment he quickly blurted out the truth, saying what he really thought, "in celeritas veritas"
In celeritas veritas by urbandiksh September 23, 2022

Argumentum Ad Veritatem

A form of Truth Bias where one invokes "truth" as a self-justifying warrant for their position, treating their claims as simply what's true and therefore beyond challenge. The fallacy lies in using the concept of truth to immunize one's views from examination—"I'm just telling the truth" becomes a way of saying "I don't need to argue, because what I say is simply reality." This fallacy shuts down inquiry rather than advancing it, positioning the speaker as the conduit of truth and all opponents as either deceived or deceivers. It's argument by assertion of virtue, not by evidence or reason.
Example: "She responded to every question with 'I'm just telling the truth'—as if saying it made it so. Argumentum Ad Veritatem: using the word 'truth' to avoid having to demonstrate it."