Abracadabra – it’s all hocus-pocus
Sue de Groot has probably covered this in her estimable Lifestyle column, but there is always more to be said about onomatopoeia. Not the ordinary old onomatopoeia, in which words mimic a nonlinguistic sound (cows moo, for instance), but the words that mimic other, non-sense-making words.
Take abracadabra, to begin alphabetically. The word is used as a magician’s flourish, the casting of a spell (and is popular among children). Some dictionaries say its synonyms are hocus-pocus and mumbo jumbo. Thus abracadabra can be a highly charged piece of verbal magic, or it can be an entirely meaningless sound. Could it be both?
Much speculation exists on the origins of abracadabra, including the notion that it is a corruption of the Hebrew meaning “I speak, therefore I create” — this is the spell business, imitating the creator God of Genesis, who speaks the world into being. There’s also the idea that it is derived from the Aramaic meaning “it has perished like the plague”, so it’s a death spell.
This idea was exploited by JK Rowling in the Harry Potter books but it turns out to have no historical validity, being based on a confusion of Hebrew and Aramaic. (As we know from spooky tales such as those told in Aramaic is the mother tongue of demons and devils generally.)
magazine’s columnist Philologos wonders whether abracadabra has Jewish origins and decides probably not.
The oldest reference to it is in the collection of medical precepts by Serenus, physician to the Roman emperor Caracalla (who died in 217 CE). He recommends the use of abracadabra, written on an amulet in a special triangular cryptogram, as a treatment for colds and fever, so it was the Grand-Pa Headache Powder of its day. It’s not hard to see how a talismanic spell-word could become a kind of summary word for all the spells magicians would like to cast.
Then there’s hocus-pocus, also defined as a conjurer’s formula, or a description of trickery or legerdemain. Its earliest mention is in about 1630, when Hocas Pocas is the name given to a travelling magician or juggler. The
claims hocus-pocus is “very likely” to be “a perversion of the phrase from the [Catholic] Mass,
‘This is my body’ ”. So, in Christian terms, it’s blasphemous too.
Why hocus-pocus has a hyphen and isn’t simply one word nobody explains.
Nor can anyone say why mumbo jumbo is two words, not one. Perhaps it has something to do with its alleged African origin, recorded in 1738: it’s an idol, it seems, worshiped by the, er, heathen.
says it may be a corruption of the Mandinka words for ancestor, and a pompom-wearer. does not explain the pompom-wearing but says it derives from the masked dancers of Mandinka ritual.
Maybe it’s just gobbledegook. Or poppycock. Or even codswallop.