cackle-bladder
See also: cackle bladder
English
WOTD – 08 November 2011
Alternative forms
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈkækəlˌblædə(ɹ)/
Audio (AU) (file)
Noun
cackle-bladder (plural cackle-bladders)
- A bladder containing (real or fake) blood, used to fake someone's death or injury, as in espionage or confidence tricks where a person is made to think that he is an accessory to murder.
- 1951 June 16, Racket Squad (television review), in The Billboard, page 8,
- It tells you how they work on the mark's own larcenous cravings for a killing, how they build him up to betting his entire stake — and then "put the chill on" via the "cackle bladder" routine, a prop murder, so named because originally the "corpse" bit on a chicken bladder and drenched himself in chicken blood.
- 1975, Anthony Greenbank, Survival in the City, page 198:
- Use a cackle bladder to bite on and spit blood whether faced with a gang or a single assailant. This is often enough to dissuade would-be aggressors […] .
- 1981, James Sherburne, Death's Gray Angel: A Paddy Moretti Mystery, page 39:
- It's a trick con men call the cackle-bladder. You take a little bag made from a pig's bladder and fill it up with chicken blood, and keep it inside your mouth until it's time to play dead.
- 2002, Judith Ivory, Untie My Heart, page 141:
- "A cackle-bladder," she murmured.
"A what?"
"It's a way to deal with the violent ones. You make them party to the consequences of violence, make them believe they've murdered someone."
- 1951 June 16, Racket Squad (television review), in The Billboard, page 8,
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