on the Pat and Mick

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English[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

Etymology[edit]

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

Prepositional phrase[edit]

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[edit]