¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Mafficked
1. maffick [v] - See also: maffick
Lexicographical Neighbors of Mafficked
Literary usage of Mafficked
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. How Diplomats Make War by Francis Neilson (1915)
"That was the condition of Britain after the close of the Boer War. During the
Boer War it was the people who mafficked; since the beginning of this war ..."
2. The Middle Years by Katharine Tynan (1917)
"... if they had not indulged in strong drink. It was an orgy. Men asked themselves
the next day how it could have happened. London had " mafficked"— might ..."
3. Japan and Her People by Andrew Steinmetz (1859)
"*-TP is something wonderful to think that a nation which ^as at an early period
so devoted to commerce, that they mafficked with sixteen different countries ..."
4. The Real Australia by Alfred Buchanan (1907)
"And yet they mafficked — and in the folly of the moment demonstrated more than
a whole tribe of philosophers could disprove in a life-time. ..."
5. Idle Ideas in 1905 by Jerome Klapka Jerome (1906)
"In this way the same battle can be mafficked over by both parties. Contentment is
the great secret of happiness. Everything happens for the best, ..."
6. The Toil of Life: Being a Collection of Essays on the Philosophy of Joy and Pain by Francis Powys Stopford (1907)
"And the nation mafficked. "Evening' grey, morning red, Sends the shepherd wet to
bed. Evening red, morning grey, Is the sure sign of a very fine day," ..."