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Triple dog dare

Scene from A Christmas Story - I triple dog dare you

Verb. triple dog dare. (slang, US) Used to denote compounding levels of dare”seriousness”; the escalation of a double dog dare. I triple dog dare you to jump.

To “double dog dare” someone is to challenge them emphatically or defiantly, although the “challenge” is often meant humorously, or at least not very seriously: “I double dog dare you to eat the entire box of doughnuts!”

  1. I dare you
  2. I double dog dare you
  3. I triple dog dare you

Scene from the Movie “A Christmas Story” 1983

A Christmas Story - The Triple Dog Dare Clip (HD)

 

Charlene Dargay, word maven, eclectic reader, history buff
To “double dog dare” someone is to challenge them emphatically or defiantly, although the “challenge” is often meant humorously, or at least not very seriously: “I double dog dare you to eat the entire box of doughnuts!”

A very good explanation of the (suspected) origin of the phrase:
The Double-Dog Dare and its Mighty Power

The Double-Dog Dare seems to be an American invention, yet another example of our particularly ingenious use of the English language. And it seems to be up to the Brits to take the most scholarly delight in researching the history of such colorful phrases, perhaps not too surprising given that the language first “belonged” to them, and they look on, sometimes aghast, while we take it to entirely new and sometimes questionable places.

A routine search of the Web to learn more about the origins of the phrase all lead back to one source, a book entitled The Child in Folk-Thought by Alexander Frances Chamberlain, published in England in 1896. He discusses American children using the escalating phrases “I dare you; I black dog dare you; I double black dog dare you.” While he doesn’t seem to be able to determine how the phrases first came into use, he does have a theory on the “black dog” component of this early documentation, which has been simplified over the years to the straight on “dog dare.”

“Black dog” was thieves’ slang for a “bad shilling,” or counterfeit shilling, its use dating back as early as 1706 in England.  So the dare may well have been the equivalent of saying “I dare you, for a bad shilling, to do [fill in scary or horrible action here]. ” At least one commentator on the topic thinks this might be stretching things to believe that a piece of underground slang from early 18th century Britain could leap the Atlantic and become part of the American vernacular, but not really show up in any print form in either country until the late 19th century. He believes that the “dog” addition is just a way to add a disparagement to the taunt, and that the earlier addition of “black dog” just means that black dogs are scarier than other dogs.

Source: https://www.quora.com/What-are-the-origins-of-the-term-double-dog-dare

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