You may be familiar with the power phrase “Abracadabra,” one of the most common terms attributed to stage magic, but few people every ponder just why this particular phrase gained such an association with legerdemain. Is it just a phrase that has actual meaning or is it just a collection of appealingly joined syllables? The truth to this particular incantation’s etymology is quite an interesting and wild ride.
The first information regarding any sort of etymology for Abracadabra arises around the same time as the creation of Groundhog Day. Magic was commonly believed to be real and used as a catch-all explanation for anything and everything that eluded a basic understanding of how the world worked, such as diseases and ways of countering tangible evil. Several different words gained an association with magic back then and abracadabra is one such word.
Abracadabra was such a well-known word of power that it was commonly used as a restorative; people would carry cone-shaped talismans around their neck bearing an engraving of the word upon its face. Notably, every downward line of the triangle would lsoe the final letter, resulting in a string of As along the bottom. The prevailing belief was that the ailing person would regain some vitality with every invocation of the phrase. While this is certainly an appealing story, and was no doubt a great sales pitch for jewelers flooded with stock, several theories exist to explain how this came to be.
- One possible origin can be traced back to the ancient Romans. The sages of this culture simply chose the word because of its linguistically repetitive characteristics.
- Another explanation may be traced back to the word’s etymological components. “Abraxas” is a phrase that appears on several charms, trinkets and amulets dated back to the late Greco-Roman era, hence the term “Abraxas stone.” This particular phrase may have also been written as “Abrasax,” due to some linguistic confusion with the Greek alphabet. There are several interpretations as to what Abraxas means but they all allude to beseeching a higher power.
- The phrase may lay in the Aramaic phrase “avra kadavra” which alludes to making something happen by merely speaking it; i.e. “do as I say.”
- Yet another interpretation is that it comes from the Hebrew words for the Holy Trinity of the Christian faith. “Ab” means “father,” “ben” means “son” and “ruach hakodesh” means “the holy spirit.”
Regardless of where the phrase may originate from, we have evidence that it is a very old word of power. Despite having an unclear, or possibly syncretized, meaning, the general perception of this word is that it was a request for help after conventional means were deemed fruitless. In essence, abracadabra was uttered as a pretext to manifesting something miraculous, achieved through a higher power than mankind.
As an amusing side note, abracadabra does not enjoy the same supernatural connotations to a German-speaker; Germans associate “sima sala bim” with stage magic thanks to stage magician Harry Jansen.