Wednesday, January 1, 2020

Wednesday's Random Slang-o-rama: Mafficking


How was your New Year's Eve? Did you go mafficking about when the clock struck midnight? I'll wager that many folks did (although I am long past that point and was more intent on sleeping the night through).

Now, let us dive into the mysterious word: mafficking...
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Mafficking is a most excellent bit of Victorian slang that, according to the Mental Floss blog post "56 Delightful Victorian Slang Terms You Should Be Using," means getting rowdy in the streets.

The origin of this word is fascinating as well. According to Merriam Webster:
 Maffick is an alteration of Mafeking Night, the British celebration of the lifting of the siege of a British military outpost during the South African War at the town of Mafikeng (also spelled Mafeking) on May 17, 1900. The South African War was fought between the British and the Afrikaners, who were Dutch and Huguenot settlers originally called Boers, over the right to govern frontier territories. Though the war did not end until 1902, the lifting of the siege of Mafikeng was a significant victory for the British because they held out against a larger Afrikaner force for 217 days until reinforcements could arrive. The rejoicing in British cities on news of the rescue produced maffick, a word that was popular for a while, especially in journalistic writing, but is now relatively uncommon.
I think it's a word that should be revived, don't you? 

Here's to a new year, a new decade, and a renewal of mafficking!
Here's to more mafficking in 2020!
Image by ktphotography from Pixabay

2 comments:

Liz V. said...

Not something I can or want to do any longer, but certainly there are suitable incidents for revival of the word. Enjoy your New Year!

Ann Parker said...

I am long past the mafficking stage myself. Can't believe it's a new decade. I'm not ready for this.... O_o Wishing you a good 2020, Liz! Thank you for being a faithful Slang-o-rama reader and commenter!