<P> The term can also mean to take unfair advantage . For example, if someone has a food buffet and one guest clearly takes more than their expected share . It can also relate to an abuse of trust, such as "You can use my' phone, but don't take the piss!", i.e. do not abuse my offer of assistance by making lengthy calls that will cost me a lot of money . Equally, a wilfully unproductive employee could be described as "taking the piss" for accepting a wage while knowingly failing to deliver on their obligation, or an employer could be accused of "taking the piss" for making unreasonable requests of their employees, e.g. expecting them to do unpaid overtime . </P> <P> "Take the piss" may be a reference to a related (and dated) idiomatic expression, piss - proud, which is a vulgar pun referring to the morning erections which happen when a man awakens at the end of a dream cycle (each about 90 minutes in length throughout the night) or may be caused by a full bladder pressing upon nerves that help effect erection . This could be considered a' false' erection, as its origin is physiological not sexual, so in a metaphoric sense, then, someone who is "piss - proud" would suffer from false pride, and taking the piss out of them refers to deflating this false pride, through disparagement or mockery . As knowledge of the expression's metaphoric origin became lost on users, "taking the piss out of" came to be synonymous with disparagement or mockery itself, with less regard to the pride of the subject . </P> <P> "Take the mickey" may be an abbreviated form of the Cockney rhyming slang "take the Mickey Bliss", a euphemism for "take the piss ." It has also been suggested that "mickey" is a contraction of "micturition," in which case "take the micturition" would be a synonymous euphemism for "take the piss ." The phrase has been noted since the 1930s . </P> <P> One theory is that during the age of the canals in Britain, urine would be brought up the canals to the wool mills in Northern England (particularly to Yorkshire), as urine was used in the process of fixing dye to wool . This was particularly the case when dyeing items blue with indigo or more traditionally with woad, before synthetic dyes were invented or made commercially available . Being in the business of transporting urine was much less lucrative than transporting wine, so when the boatmen were questioned what they were carrying they would lie and say "I'm taking wine" and the response would be "No, you're taking the piss" to express disbelief . </P>

Where does the phrase taking the mickey come from
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