n. [ Cf. F. & Sp. tafia, It. taffia; fr. Malay tāfīa a spirit distilled from molasses. Cf. Ratafia. ] A variety of rum. [ West Indies ] [ 1913 Webster ]
{ ‖‖, n. [ It. maffia. ] 1. A secret society which organized in Sicily as a political organization, but is now widespread among Italians, and is used to further or protect private interests, reputedly by illegal methods; called also the Sicilian Mafia. [ wns=2 ] [ Webster 1913 Suppl. ]
2. A group of loosely associated of criminal organizations in the United States, some having ties to the Sicilian Mafia, and organized in “families”; the term is applied to the entire group of organizations, or to any one local group. Also, loosely, organized groups of criminals anywhere, as the Russian mafia. [ wns=1 ] Syn. -- syndicate, mob, Cosa Nostra, La Cosa Nostra, organized crime. [ WordNet 1.6 + PJC ]
3. Any tightly knit group of trusted associates having strong control or influence in some area; as, Kennedy and his Irish Mafia. [ informal ] [ wns=3 ] [ PJC ]
(n) a crime syndicate in the United States; organized in families; believed to have important relations to the Sicilian Mafia, Syn. Maffia, Cosa Nostra
(n) a secret terrorist group in Sicily; originally opposed tyranny but evolved into a criminal organization in the middle of the 19th century, Syn. Maffia, Sicilian Mafia
[くみ, kumi] (n) (1) (pronounced ぐみ as a suffix) set (of items); (2) group (of people); class (of students); company (esp. construction); family (i.e. mafia); team; (3) typesetting; composition; (P)#753
[yakuza (P); yakuza] (n) (1) (possibly from 八九三) professional gambler or ruffian (esp. a member of the Japanese mafia); yakuza (member); (adj-na, n) (2) uselessness; purposelessness; (P)#17614