Meaning and Word Usage – Using the Word ‘Tiffin’ to Refer to a Lunch Box

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In "Indian English" (whatever that means) the word 'tiffin' is used to refer to lunch boxes in south Asia. Please feel free to Google the word if you want a picture of what such lunch boxes look like.

I recently, out of habit, used the word in the US and no one knew what it meant. I was asked if it's a Hindi word or an English word. That got me thinking. I always assumed it was an English word but after quick Google search it does not seem like it.

So my question is does any other place use the word 'tiffin'? If not, how did it take hold in south Asia? Is it an archaic British word that stuck in India following the colonial rule?

Best Answer

It is an Indian English term, probably from BrE old slag term tiffing, meaning take a little drink:

In the British Raj, where the British custom of afternoon tea was supplanted by the Indian practice of taking a light meal at that hour, it came to be called tiffin. It is derived from English colloquial or slang tiffing meaning to take a little drink, and had by 1867 become naturalised among Anglo-Indians in the north of the country to mean luncheon.

(Wikipedia)

The ODO suggests that its origin is from a dialectal term meaning “sipping”:

Tiffin:

Early 19th century: apparently from dialect tiffing ‘sipping’, of unknown origin.