on the Pat and Mick

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

Rhyming slang for on the sick. Pat and Mick are stereotypical Irish names.

Prepositional phrase

on the Pat and Mick

  1. (Cockney rhyming slang) Sick; out of commission due to being unwell.
    • 1981 October 2, Jack McLean, “Limping along the road to recovery”, in Glasgow Herald, Scotland, retrieved 10 August 2015:
      Things are very different when you are off on the sick. . . . For a start, when you are on the Pat and Mick you no longer go to work.
    • 2008 July 22, Daisy Dart, “Re: Fatal bus accident in Leeds”, in Bus and Coach Forum, UK, retrieved 10 August 2015:
      I'm on the pat and mick at the mo. Only went to town to see my mother off on the train, as she'd come down for the weekend to cheer me up.
    • 2013 Dec. 8, Bren, "Dropped car battery," autoshite.com Motoring chat forum (UK) (retrieved 10 Aug 2015):
      While lifting the SD1's battery the handle came off. . . . [I]t then bounced and landed on my foot—good job I was wearing my toetectors otherwise I would have spent Christmas on the pat and mick.

Synonyms

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