On the sick
British Slang. (adj. / noun phrase)
The highly-coveted state of being officially certified by a doctor as medically unfit to endure the daily grind, allowing an individual to stay home and collect state-funded or corporate coins. Particularly used by employees of state-run organisations with soft middle-managers and overly lax sickness employment clauses.
It is the long-term, professional upgrade to "throwing a sickie." While standard medical dictionaries define it as a temporary illness recovery period, British street law dictates it is an indefinite vacation funded by the taxpayer, usually requiring a vague diagnosis like "a dodgy back" or "generalised existential dread."
The highly-coveted state of being officially certified by a doctor as medically unfit to endure the daily grind, allowing an individual to stay home and collect state-funded or corporate coins. Particularly used by employees of state-run organisations with soft middle-managers and overly lax sickness employment clauses.
It is the long-term, professional upgrade to "throwing a sickie." While standard medical dictionaries define it as a temporary illness recovery period, British street law dictates it is an indefinite vacation funded by the taxpayer, usually requiring a vague diagnosis like "a dodgy back" or "generalised existential dread."
"Alright mate, seen Dave lately?" / "Nah, he’s been on the sick since 2024 because of his knee, but I just saw his Instagram story smashing out 80kg barbell squats in the gym."
"The department deadline is tomorrow and we're running behind. Gonna go on the sick and claim its not good for my mental health - i can't be arsed with it and someone else can do it..."
"The department deadline is tomorrow and we're running behind. Gonna go on the sick and claim its not good for my mental health - i can't be arsed with it and someone else can do it..."
On the sick by eddamoo June 3, 2026
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