case of the Mondays

English

Noun

case of the Mondays (plural cases of the Mondays)

  1. (humorous) A fictitious disorder associated with the tiredness, irritability or distractedness that comes from returning to work after the weekend.
    • 1975, Black Enterprise
      A reporter, who has worked his way up to a top-level and high pressured position with a large metropolitan daily, suffers from a chronic case of "the Mondays."
    • 2007, Joe Scartz, Bicentennial Baby, iUniverse →ISBN
      The road ahead for them is full of Syls and Caseys and Coopers and “Cases of the Mondays.” I hope they enjoyed Toy Story because if they thought Tim Allen was frightening then they sure as shit aren't going to be expecting that first Monday morning staff meeting now are they?
    • 2009, Lexi M. Schuh, Jennifer L. Dincola, How to Get the Promotion You Want in 90 Days Or Less: A Step-by-Step Plan for Making It Happen, Atlantic Publishing Company →ISBN, page 214
      Perhaps you may have played a role in the initiation of this potential fight, or maybe the combatant simply woke up tired, missed his bus, or is having a bad case of "the Mondays."
    • 2014, Joni Parsley, Tapestry of Faith: Discovering God's Beautiful Design in the Laughter, Tears, and Struggles of Life, Charisma Media →ISBN, page 20
      Today I'm having a case of the Mondays. For us, the weekend is often busy, but every now and then Mondays are just blah.
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