ticket
See also: Ticket
English
Etymology
From Middle English ticket, from Old French etiquet m, *estiquet m, and etiquette f, estiquette f (“a bill, note, label, ticket”), from Old French estechier, estichier, estequier (“to attach, stick”), (compare Picard estiquier (“to stick, pierce”)), from Frankish *stikkan, *stikjan (“to stick, pierce, sting”), from Proto-Germanic *stikaną, *stikōną, *staikijaną (“to be sharp, pierce, prick”), from Proto-Indo-European *st(e)ig-, *(s)teyg- (“to be sharp, to stab”). Doublet of etiquette. More at stick.
Pronunciation
Noun
ticket (plural tickets or tix) (tix is informal)
- A pass entitling the holder to admission to a show, concert, etc.
- A pass entitling the holder to board a train, a bus, a plane, or other means of transportation
- A citation for a traffic violation.
- A permit to operate a machine on a construction site.
- A service request, used to track complaints or requests that an issue be handled. (Generally technical support related).
- (informal) A list of candidates for an election, or a particular theme to a candidate's manifesto.
- Joe has joined the party's ticket for the county elections.
- Joe will be running on an anti-crime ticket.
- A solution to a problem; something that is needed.
- That's the ticket.
- I saw my first bike as my ticket to freedom.
- 1884, Mark Twain, chapter 34, in Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, →ISBN:
- "Here's the ticket. This hole's big enough for Jim to get through if we wrench off the board."
- (dated) A little note or notice.
- Fuller
- He constantly read his lectures twice a week for above forty years, giving notice of the time to his auditors in a ticket on the school doors.
- Fuller
- (dated) A tradesman's bill or account (hence the phrase on ticket and eventually on tick).
- J. Cotgrave
- Your courtier is mad to take up silks and velvets / On ticket for his mistress.
- J. Cotgrave
- A label affixed to goods to show their price or description.
- A certificate or token of a share in a lottery or other scheme for distributing money, goods, etc.
- (dated) A visiting card.
- 1878, Mrs. James Mason, All about Edith (page 124)
- I asked for a card, please, and she was quite put about, and said that she didn't require tickets to get in where she visited.
- 1899, The Leisure Hour: An Illustrated Magazine for Home Reading
- "Mr. Gibbs come in just now," said Mrs. Blewett, "and left his ticket over the chimley. There 'tis. I haven't touched it."
- 1878, Mrs. James Mason, All about Edith (page 124)
Derived terms
Translations
admission to entertainment
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pass for transportation
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traffic citation
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permit to operate machine
informal: list of candidates
- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables, removing any numbers. Numbers do not necessarily match those in definitions. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout#Translations.
Translations to be checked
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Descendants
- Tibetan: ཊི་ཀ་སི (ṭi ka si)
Verb
ticket (third-person singular simple present tickets, present participle ticketing, simple past and past participle ticketed)
- To issue someone a ticket, as for travel or for a violation of a local or traffic law.
- To mark with a ticket.
- to ticket goods in a retail store
Derived terms
- ticket off
Dutch
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈtɪ.kət/
Audio (file) - Hyphenation: tic‧ket
Derived terms
- vliegticket
French
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ti.kɛ/
audio (file)
Further reading
- “ticket” in le Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
Italian
Etymology
Portuguese
Pronunciation
- (Brazil) IPA(key): /ˈt͡ʃi.ket͡ʃ/
Swedish
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