mandem
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Jamaican Creole man dem (“men”). Equivalent to man + them.
Noun
mandem pl (plural only)
- (MLE, MTE) A group of men or boys; male friends or fellow gang members.
- Coordinate term: gyal dem
- 2011, “Chyna”, in How I Escaped a Girl Gang: Rolling in a London Girl Gang:
- The mandem all used to go round there and get head off her, the sister blowing the man line by line while her brother shotted downstairs in the stairwell.
- 2013, Polly Courtney, Feral Youth, page 169:
- She probably heard some hyped up version from the mandem but she don't know the truth. She ain't seen what I seen.
- 2013, David Childs, Britain since 1945: A Political History:
- […] reports suggest he may have had links to that group and allied north London gangs such as the Broadwater Farm Posse and Tottenham Mandem.
- 2023, “Sprinter”, performed by Central Cee x Dave:
- The mandem too inconsiderate, five-star hotel, smokin' cigarette / Mixin' codeine up with the Phenergan
Galician
Verb
mandem
- (reintegrationist norm) inflection of mandar:
- third-person plural present subjunctive
- third-person plural imperative
Latin
Portuguese
Verb
mandem
- inflection of mandar:
- third-person plural present subjunctive
- third-person plural imperative
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