A fork of Rural Dictionary
-Word used by odessa residents to refer to Permian high school football
a person who possesses rare knowledge or extremely skilled with a subject or activity. This person is usually very deft at explaining complex subjects or ideas with ease and simplicity. Well coordinated or gifted with a talent.
The new professor in the physics dept is the mojo.
That woman is a mojo at badminton.
Stuart killed me at Jenga, he is a mojo.
Mojo is that kind of guy you find in the men's room at the Monkey Cave, Lima Peru, and he's just hanging out there, in bad shape, and hoping to get a solid blow job before moving on the the Palace of Princess Peussie.
"That slug is a MOJO, definitely a follower of Mary Mount and Princess Peussie; I wouldn't blow him for anything"
Mojo is a noun originally used to mean a magic charm or spell or an amulet, often in the form of a small bag containing magic items worn by adherents of hoodoo or voodoo, or it could mean a quality or some ability that brings good luck or helps you be good at something. Originally from the US and associated with the music and dance culture, it has entered the English language and has also taken on an additional meaning of personal confidence and charisma with regard to sexual relationships. The word Mojo itself probably derives from African-American language where it refers to a personal talisman or witchcraft charm, and is itself derived from the word Moco used by the Gullah people meaning witchcraft or possibly from the Fula word moco’o meaning medicine man.
The word mojo first received widespread exposure in the song “Got My Mojo Working” which was written by Preston Foster.