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As a result, some scientists would like to see the same test performed on people who have acquired anosmia.—
Alexa Robles-Gil,
Smithsonian Magazine,
25 Oct. 2024 For people living with anosmia, that reframing offers a quieter form of possibility, not the return of smell, but a new way to engage with the chemical world through learning, adaptation, and experience.—New Atlas,
12 Jan. 2026 Nearly 1 in 4 people have anosmia, according to National Institutes of Health estimates.—
Linda Carroll,
NBC News,
22 Oct. 2024 The scientific term for loss of smell is anosmia, and the COVID-19 pandemic has brought this disorder to the forefront, as more than 40% of patients reported loss of smell.—
Kristen Lynch,
USA TODAY,
1 Aug. 2023 See All Example Sentences for anosmia
Word History
Etymology
borrowed from New Latin, from Greek an-an- + -osmia (as in euosmía "fragrance, perfume," kakosmía "bad odor"), from -osmos "having an odor (of the kind specified)" (adjective derivative from osmḗ "odor, scent," going back to *od-smā, derivative—with -smē, -mē, deverbal noun suffix—of od-, base of ózein "to smell, give off an odor") + -ia-ia entry 1 — more at odor