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  1. to laugh at someone and make them seem silly, in a funny or unkind way: A group of other boys were taking the mickey out of him. She's always taking the mick - she's got no respect for the managers at all. She was trying to organize everything and the kids were just standing there taking the mick.

  2. Nov 27, 2017 · MEANING. In British English, the informal phrase to take the mickey, or the mike, out of someone means to tease or ridicule someone. —Cf. also the humorous polite variant to extract the Michael—and to extract the urine, humorous polite variant of to take the piss. PROBABLE ORIGIN.

  3. The first form of the phrase in print – as ‘take the mike’ – comes from 1935, in George Ingram’s Cockney Cavalcade: “He wouldn’t let Pancake ‘take the mike’ out of him.” The precise wording – ‘take the Mickey’ doesn’t appear in print until a few years later.

  4. take the mick (out of someone or something) To tease, mock, or ridicule (someone or something); to joke or kid around (about someone or something). A variant of "take the piss (out of someone)." Primarily heard in UK, Ireland.

  5. The idiom “take the mick” is a widely used expression in British English that refers to mocking or making fun of someone or something. It has several variations, including “take the mickey,” “take the piss,” and “take the pee.”

  6. Apr 21, 2024 · In this #short for #learningenglish we explain what the popular British English idiom 'to take the mickey or to take the mick' means. ...more.

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  7. take the mick (out of someone or something) To tease, mock, or ridicule (someone or something); to joke or kid around (about someone or something). A variant of "take the piss (out of someone)."

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