Glossary entry

English term or phrase:

get my medicine checked

English answer:

if I was feeling okay/if I was serious

Added to glossary by XiaoRan
Dec 15, 2006 08:23
17 yrs ago
English term

get my medicine checked

English Art/Literary Linguistics
my boss ask me if I'd been to see my doctor to get my medicine checked.

Discussion

Aisha Maniar Dec 15, 2006:
More context would still help - but the basic idea is that does she know/realise what she is saying? The boss asks if she is aware of what she is saying? They don't think she is.
XiaoRan (asker) Dec 15, 2006:
the background is the woman shouted to her boss.
David Moore (X) Dec 15, 2006:
That's not fair; until you give us decent context, you already have ONE good explanation...
Aisha Maniar Dec 15, 2006:
Please can you provide some more context first. Perhaps just the sentence before and afterwards. Thanks.
XiaoRan (asker) Dec 15, 2006:
Thank you Aisha. Could you please explain the whole sentence for me?
David Moore (X) Dec 15, 2006:
We really need to have the background to this question, as Aisha says; otherwise we are in the dark and can only guess what is meant.

Responses

+7
4 mins
Selected

if I was feeling okay/if I was serious

more context would be required to know exactly which of the above applies - it basically is an idiomatic way of saying metaphorically that someone is crazy (hence they are on drugs/medicine - but not in reality) or not aware of/serious in what they are saying.
Peer comment(s):

agree Sara Noss
7 mins
thank you
agree kmtext : Yes. It's usually meant humorously - an update of "get your bumps felt" (Phrenology reference)
15 mins
thank you
agree Robert Fox
23 mins
thank you
agree Lorenia de la Vega
1 hr
thankyou
agree Vicky Papaprodromou
3 hrs
thank you
agree Hamid Sadeghieh : This idiomatically refers to a condition in which one takes the wrong medicine. So the point of comparison is the unexpected/undesirable result or reaction.
21 hrs
agree Will Matter
2 days 9 hrs
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4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer. Comment: "Both are helpful. Thank you all"
+1
14 hrs

have my psychiatric medication reviewed (literal). Are you crazy? (figurative)

The boss is suggesting, either seriously or sarcastically, that the woman's behaviour is so inappropriate that she appears to be suffering from a mental disorder, which is out of control. Taken literally, he is proposing that she consult her physician to adjust the dose of her psychiatric medicine.

Of course, it is most likely a rhetorical question intended as a putdown. Whether or not it was made humorously can only be determined by the context.
Peer comment(s):

agree Will Matter : Also acceptable.
1 day 19 hrs
Thanks Will.
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