Take the Mickey


🗓️ Idiom: Take the Mickey (verb)


💬 Meaning

  • To tease or make fun of someone, usually in a playful or friendly way.
  • In the workplace, it can mean joking with colleagues without being rude or unkind.

🧠 Example Sentences

  • Everyone in the office takes the mickey out of Paul for always being late, but he doesn’t mind.
  • She was just taking the mickey when she said your desk looks like a jungle.
  • It’s fine to take the mickey at work, as long as people know it’s only a joke.

🏛️ Origin

The phrase “take the mickey” is a shortened form of “take the mickey Bliss,” which was rhyming slang for “take the piss” — meaning to mock or tease. Over time, “take the mickey” became the polite and widely accepted version used in both British and workplace English.


📝 Practice Exercises

1. Fill in the blank:
He was only ________ when he said your report was longer than a novel.

Answer

taking the mickey

2. Multiple choice:
If someone “takes the mickey,” they:
a) Make fun of someone in a light-hearted way
b) Get angry at someone
c) Refuse to joke around

Answer

a) Make fun of someone in a light-hearted way

3. Change the sentence using “take the mickey”:
“They joked about his new haircut during lunch.”

Answer

They took the mickey out of his new haircut during lunch.


ℹ️ Other Useful Pages

📚 Learning Resources

👉 Idioms for Humour in the Workplace
👉 Business English Idioms List

👥 Support Spaces

👉 Student Space
👉 Tutor Toolkit

⭐️ Extras

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