What Does MXM Mean in South Africa
Slang terms and expressions with a heavy Afrikaans influence are included in this list of “Afrikanerisms.” People who speak both English and Afrikaans in the same neighborhoods as people who speak just Afrikaans are considered typical users. Many of these words are also often used by South Africans of various ethnic backgrounds and those who reside in nearby nations like Zimbabwe, Botswana, Zambia, etc. Formal South African English doesn’t use these terminology.
What Mxm means
tongue-clicking, a way of expressing sarcasm or annoyance.
“Mxim sies!
Below is a collection of common South African slang terms along with their definitions.
relationship with a buddy, partner, or chum
A cozzie, often known as a swimming costume, is a swimsuit.
A slur used to disparage Afrikaners, crunchie
To deliberately ignore someone else is to trash them. That okay is completely awesome.
insulting me
Double-up is just a “shortcut,” although in this case not many people are aware of the shortcut.
“I’m going to make a duck out of this party, bro” is an example of using the verb duck/dip, which is derived from the English word duck (which is not connected to the bird).
A euphemism for the offensive f-word is flip. used for emphasis or to show a variety of emotions, including wrath, displeasure, disdain, impatience, and astonishment.
It is when anything is done unnecessarily, too frequently for the circumstance, or when one adds something unneeded to a discourse (It is a noun and verb)
Give rocks and act impartially. As an illustration: “I give rocks about your worries! (I couldn’t care less about your worries!)
It is also possible to say “Give rocks.” as a shorthand, and the converse phrase, “I don’t give rocks,” expresses the same idea.
Gay man named Giyn
A word used to describe eating is “graze.” We should go graze since I’m starving.
a bit too difficult for a better grade (from the South African matric division of exams into standard grade and higher grade. The system of dividing subjects into higher and standard grade has become non-existent as of 2008.)
howzit, lit How are things? similar to “hello,” but more casual. It’s crucial to remember that nobody expects you to start telling them how things are.
hundreds – nice, fine, as in 100%; for instance: Splaff asks Bazza, “Howzit bro, how are you?” Bazza replies, “I’m fine.