See also: wolf's ticket

English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

See sell wolf tickets.

Noun edit

wolf ticket (plural wolf tickets)

  1. (African-American Vernacular, chiefly in the plural) Tough talk; threat(s) or boast(s), especially if empty and/or if made to intimidate someone. (Chiefly used in the phrases sell wolf tickets and buy wolf tickets.)
    • 2002, Jimmy Lerner, quoted in African American Slang: A Linguistic Description (2015, →ISBN:
      Following another fifteen-minute flurry of wolf tickets, young deputy Camel does the handcuff routine again.
    • 2012, Al Bermudez Pereira, Ruins of a Society and the Honorable: A Prison Story, →ISBN, page 88:
      They have to project a tough-guy image so that others would think they're hardcore criminals, but in reality, it's to keep away potential extorters and possible booty bandits from violating them. I left him there in his cell and paid no mind to his offer of wolf tickets (Slang for tough talk).

Usage notes edit