cry wolf

English

Alternative forms

  • cry “wolf”

Etymology

From the fable The Boy Who Cried Wolf, where a little boy amuses himself by repeatedly crying "wolf" to see the panic he causes in the community, but is consequently ignored when he tries to alert them to a real wolf.

Pronunciation

  • Audio (General Australian):(file)

Verb

cry wolf (third-person singular simple present cries wolf, present participle crying wolf, simple past and past participle cried wolf)

  1. (idiomatic) To raise a false alarm; to constantly warn others about an imagined threat, thereby failing to get assistance when a real threat appears.
    The politicians would cry wolf at the slightest provocation so when the real threat appeared no one believed them.

Translations

See also