toyi-toyi
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Seemingly from Northern Ndebele [Term?], but the ultimate origin is unclear.
Noun
[edit]toyi-toyi (plural toyi-toyis)
- (South Africa, Zimbabwe) A dance from southern Africa, used especially during political protests.
Verb
[edit]toyi-toyi (third-person singular simple present toyi-toyis, present participle toyi-toying, simple past and past participle toyi-toyied)
- (South Africa, Zimbabwe) To perform this dance.
- 2012, Nadine Gordimer, No Time Like the Present, Bloomsbury, published 2013, page 30:
- [H]e stood with his back against the chanting, toyi-toying boys, arms outstretched as a shield before them: the sergeant strangely distracted by the old authority enacted the same stance, but to hold his men back.
- 2017, Matthew Hahn, The Robben Island Shakespeare:
- They are kids who get caught up in the excitement, hysteria of the period. You know, toyi-toying and hurling stones, and they are arrested and sentenced to a minimum five years on Robben Island.