anglophilia means the love of the country, culture or people of England. Lexicurio rates it Sui generis — a strength score of 87 out of 100.
anglophilia is pronounced /ˌæŋ.ɡləʊˈfɪ.li.ə/.
Why “anglophilia” is a great word
ANGLOPHILIA — [Noun] A strong admiration or enthusiasm for England, its people, culture, and things English. From the combining form Anglo- (pertaining to England or the English) and the combining form -philia (meaning 'love of' or 'strong affinity for'), probably modeled after the earlier word Anglophile. Unlike Anglophilism, which suggests a more formal doctrine, or Anglophobia, its stark opposite of aversion, Anglophilia is a posture of cultivated yearning. It manifests as the precise ritual of a four o'clock pot of tea in a foreign city, the tactile pleasure of cracked leather on a second-hand Dickens, and the melancholic charm of rain on a cottage garden—a curated nostalgia for an England that exists more vividly in the imagination than in fact, a homesickness for a home that was never truly one's own.
noun
- The love of the country, culture or people of England.“Perhaps Anglophilia continues to play its part, but if I were one of the few surviving teachers of Anglo-Saxon I would rejoice at the way in which such terms as muggle and Wizengamot, and such names as Godric, Wulfric and Dumbledore, had become common currency.”