“Calling out sick” seems to be most common in New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut. But some people even say they "call off sick."
This is shaping up to bea nasty flu season, which prompted a listener named Marc to bring up a regionalism I had forgotten about. He said, “My [girlfriend] and I have a bit of a contention…with the bug going on and people getting sick. When they call work, do they call ‘in sick’ or call ‘out sick’?”
Back in 2009, I posed this question to my followers on social media and made a map of their responses.
red=call in sick. yellow=call out sick. green=call off sick. blue=mixed.
I noticed a few interesting things while I was going through the responses to make the map:
Marc said his girlfriend did, indeed, live on the East Coast for a few years, and he asked me to say that “call in sick” is the right way to say it. Sorry, Marc. I can’t do that. It’s like sayingyou stand on line instead of saying you stand in line. These areidioms, and they sound weird to those of us who don’t live near New York, but they aren’t wrong. Some idioms are just different in some parts of the country.
This is an interesting one, and I’d love to hear what you think, especially about the role of corporate culture. Do you think it’s just a result of companies having regional bases or do you think it’s something else?
[Editor’s Note: Australian readers say in their country, they “take a sickie” or if they are only pretending to be sick to get a day off, they may say they are “chucking a sickie.”
I’ve also been told that in the 1980s in the Boston area, at least some people said they “bang out sick”; and in Britain, people who are not able to work because of long-term illness or disability are said to be “on the sick.”]
Mignon Fogarty is the founder of Quick and Dirty Tips and the author of seven books on language, including the New York Times bestseller "Grammar Girl's Quick and Dirty Tips for Better Writing." She is an inductee in the Podcasting Hall of Fame, and the show is a five-time winner of Best Education Podcast in the Podcast Awards. She has appeared as a guest expert on the Oprah Winfrey Show and the Today Show. Her popular LinkedIn Learning courses help people write better to communicate better. Find her onMastodon.
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