Talk:wolf ticket
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Latest comment: 9 years ago by -sche
This term is attested since circa 1964. One early sense used in AAVE was "nonsense; empty talk; bull", but I can only find one citation of it so far:
- c. 1960s or 1970s, patient 14, quoted by Jacqueline P. Wiseman in Stations of the Lost: The Treatment of Skid Row Alcoholics (1970, 1979), page 146:
- Patient inmates describe therapy and the therapists as follows:
- In general, group therapy is . . .
- ["]Fried ice cream and wolf tickets.["]
- (Wolf tickets are a Southern Negro term referring to selling tickets to a wolf hunt that is never held.)
- Wikipedia and several other sources have the alternatively etymology "from woofing, meaning aimless talk, an onomatopoeic reference to the sound of dogs barking. The expression is usually used as a part of the phrase "to sell wolf tickets", meaning to bluff or threaten someone in a boastful way, or "to buy wolf tickets", meaning to call the bluff or accept the implied challenge."