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Definition 2024
chamcha
chamcha
English
Noun
chamcha (plural chamchas)
- (colloquial) A sycophant and hanger-on or lackey.
- 1989. Stuart Auerbach. Washington Post. (Mar. 26) “Nehru and His Nation”
- M J Akbar has been called a chamcha to the Gandhi family, and some of that slavish devotion shows up in his uncritical acceptance of Nehru’s government-dominated economic program and the erosion of the country’s grass roots political structure as a result of the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty.
- 1994. William Dalrymple City of Djinns: A Year in Delhi (Dec. 1) “Glossary” p. 340:
- Chamcha Sycophant (lit. ‘spoon’). 1997. Ghulam Nabi Azad. India Today (June 23) p. 13: I have my own standing in the party. I cannot be anybody’s chamcha (stooge).
- 1997. Sudhir Vaishnav. Times of India. (Aug. 24) “A very political exercise”
- Several hangers-on. They are available aplenty everywhere in the country and are often known in the local market as Chamcha.
- 1998. P.S. Sharma Times of India (Jan. 17) “In Praise of Chamchagiri”
- No doubt, the United Kingdom also had their sycophants—toadys, bachhas, jholichuks and hukkabardars—but chamchas of the modern vintage they had none. Chamchas are a breed apart.
- 2004. Krishnakumar. Midday (Mumbai, India) (Sept. 21)
- Leaders’ chamchas get lucky”: All three have pulled strings in their respective parties to get Assembly poll tickets for their puppets and close confidants, better known in political parlance as chamchas.
- 1989. Stuart Auerbach. Washington Post. (Mar. 26) “Nehru and His Nation”
Related terms
- chamchagiri (meaning spooning or sycophancy)
References
- 2004 [Ambar] rvinst (Bangalore, India) (Oct. 2) “Advanced Kannada Slang”: Chamcha.
- 2005 Asra Nomani American Prospect (Mar. 5) “Pulpit Bullies”: Speaking in Urdu, the language of South-Asian Muslims.
- The Chamcha Age
- Outlook India