mickey

listen to the pronunciation of mickey
English - English
A 375-milliliter (13.2 imperial fluid ounce; 12.7 US fl oz) bottle of liquor, such as whiskey
A Mickey Finn; a beverage, usually alcoholic, that has been drugged
A diminutive of the female given name Michaela
A diminutive of the male given names Michael, Mike or Mick
A small bottle of liquor, holding 375 ml or 13 oz., typically shaped to fit in one's pocket
piss, shortened and more commonly used form of Mickey Bliss
American depression era term for a potato as in a "roasted mickey"
{i} Mickey Finn, alcoholic drink to which a strong sedative has been slipped; drink that is laced with chloral hydrate without the drinkers knowing to incapacitate them (Slang); depressants, sedatives, drugsthat reduces tension and anxiety (Street Slang); penis, male sexual organ (Irish Slang)
A male given name, diminutive of Michael, Mike or Mick
A female given name, diminutive of Michaela
{i} male or female first name (esp. short form of Michael)
If you take the mickey out of someone or something, you make fun of them, usually in an unkind way. He started taking the mickey out of this poor man just because he is bald. = mock, tease. take the mickey (out of sb) to make someone look silly, often in a friendly way, for example by copying them or by pretending something is true when it is not (From the male name Mickey). Mantle Mickey Mickey Charles Mantle Mickey Mouse Rooney Mickey Spillane Mickey Wright Mickey
(slur) a person of Irish descent
A bottle of liquor, half the usual size of 750 millilitres; such bottles are generally shaped to fit in ones pocket
Mickey Bliss
piss
Mickey D
Nickname for McDonald's, chain of fast-food restaurants

Damn thing even promised free Mickey D chicken salad coupons for filling out questionnaires.

Mickey D's
Nickname for McDonald's, (the chain of fast food restaurants)

This like Mickey D's. It's all about the dollar. I can pay you, said the old woman. She raised a pathetic handful of ragged bills.

Mickey Finn
an alcoholic drink doctored with a drug intended to quickly render the drinker unconscious
Mickey Flynn
Alternative spelling of Mickey Finn
Mickey Mantle
The popular, record-breaking, often-injured center fielder of the New York Yankees in the 1950s and 1960s

I suppose he is kind of like the Mickey Mantle of tennis: awesome career stats, but a lot of What If questions about how he could have been even *better* if only he had worked more at it.

Mickey Mantle
A popular hero and champion in a field
Mickey Mouse
The most famous Disney character, an anthropomorphic mouse
Mickey Mouse
Of an item of dubious quality
Mickey Mousing
A technique used to synchronize actions on screen with the accompanying music
Mickey Finn
{i} (1948-2003) United States drummer
Mickey Finn
{i} alcoholic drink to which a strong sedative has been slipped; drink that is laced with chloral hydrate without the drinkers knowing to incapacitate them (Slang); depressants, sedatives, drugsthat reduces tension and anxiety (Street Slang)
Mickey Mantle
in full Mickey Charles Mantle born Oct. 20, 1931, Spavinaw, Okla., U.S. died Aug. 13, 1995, Dallas, Texas U.S. baseball player. Mantle joined the New York Yankees in 1951 and became a powerful switch-hitting outfielder and first baseman. Between 1954 and 1961 "the Mick" led the American League four times in home runs, six times in runs, and once in RBIs, the latter occurring in the year (1956) that he won the triple crown for home runs, RBI, and batting average (.353). In 1961 he hit 54 home runs, finishing second in the home-run race behind his teammate Roger Maris, who broke Babe Ruth's season record that same year. Mantle had to play with his legs heavily taped for much of his career because of injuries to his ankles and knees. He retired in 1968 with a lifetime total of 536 home runs
Mickey Mouse
{i} cartoon character created by Walt Disney in 1928 (also known as Mickey)
Mickey Mouse
disapproval You use Mickey Mouse to show that you think something is silly, childish, easy, or worthless. This is not a Mickey Mouse course where every player has a chance. small and not at all important (Mickey Mouse, cartoon character invented by the U.S. film producer Walt Disney). a cartoon character invented by Walt Disney. He is the most famous of all Disney's characters and is often used as a symbol of the Disney organization. Famous character of Walt Disney's animated cartoons. He was introduced in Steamboat Willie (1928), the first animated cartoon with sound. Mickey was created by Disney, who also provided his high-pitched voice, and was usually drawn by the studio's head animator, Ub Iwerks. Noted for his overlarge head and round black ears, he became the star of more than 100 cartoon shorts. The Mickey Mouse Club was one of the most popular television shows for children in the U.S. in the 1950s, and the signature black cap with mouse ears worn by the show's stars became one of the most widely distributed items in merchandising history
Mickey Rooney
orig. Joe Yule, Jr. born Sept. 23, 1920, Brooklyn, N.Y., U.S. U.S. film actor. He joined his family in their vaudeville act from the age of 17 months and made his film debut playing a cigar-smoking midget con man in 1926. He starred in 50 RKO short comedies as Mickey McGuire (1927-33) and won praise for his roles in A Midsummer Night's Dream (1935) and Boys Town (1938). From 1937 he played the cocky, energetic Andy Hardy in a series of popular films, often teamed with Judy Garland. His later film successes include The Human Comedy (1943), National Velvet (1944), Baby Face Nelson (1957), and The Black Stallion (1979). He made a successful Broadway debut in Sugar Babies in 1979, and he continued to perform in popular musical theatre productions, appearing in the title role of The Wizard of Oz in 1998
Mickey Rourke
(born 1956) American movie actor who starred in "Nine and a Half Weeks
Mickey Spillane
orig. Frank Morrison Spillane born March 9, 1918, Brooklyn, N.Y., U.S. U.S. writer of pulp detective fiction. He initially wrote for pulp magazines and comic books in order to pay for his schooling. His first novel, I, The Jury (1947), introduced the detective Mike Hammer, who later appeared in works from My Gun Is Quick (1950) to Black Alley (1996). His other novels, all characterized by violence and sexual licentiousness, include The Deep (1961), a series with the international agent Tiger Mann beginning with Day of the Guns (1964), and The Killing Man (1989). Spillane claimed to write solely for monetary gain and flouted literary taste with recurring elements of sadism that disturbed some readers, but the captivating vigour of his narrative and of his central characters brought him popular success
Mickey Wright
orig. Mary Kathryn Wright born Feb. 14, 1935, San Diego, Calif., U.S. U.S. golfer. Noted for her classic swing, her long drives, and her superior iron play, she won a record number of LPGA tournaments (82), including an unmatched 13 in one season (1963), and remains the only four-time winner of the LPGA Championship (1958, 1960, 1961, 1963). Twice named Woman Athlete of the Year by the Associated Press (1963, 1964), she has been called the greatest woman golfer of all time
mickey mouse
(informal terms) small and of little importance; "a fiddling sum of money"; "a footling gesture"; "our worries are lilliputian compared with those of countries that are at war"; "a little (or small) matter"; "Mickey Mouse regulations"; "a dispute over niggling details"; "limited to petty enterprises"; "piffling efforts"; "giving a police officer a free meal may be against the law, but it seems to be a picayune infraction"
mickey mouse
a fictional mouse created in animated film strips by Walt Disney
Texas mickey
A very large bottle of hard liquor, holding 3,000 ml (106 imperial oz. or 101 US oz.), or, formerly, one holding 133.3 oz
take the mickey
To ridicule or mock

Are you takin' the mickey? You'll get yer 'ead bashed in.

taken the mickey
Past participle of take the mickey
takes the mickey
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of take the mickey
taking the mickey
Present participle of take the mickey
took the mickey
Simple past of take the mickey
mickeys
Plural of mickey
take the mickey out of someone
(Slang) mock someone
mickey
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