Uy Philippines! Oxford Dictionary Adds 11 Filipino Words, Including 'Gigil'

The West yearns for more Filipino words in their dictionaries.
The Oxford English Dictionary has recently added 11 new Filipino words to their Philippine English category. This addition includes the untranslatable word to express a feeling of intense cuteness aggression, “gigil.”
The Oxford English Dictionary describes “gigil” as both a noun and an adjective; as a noun, the dictionary says it’s “an intense feeling caused by anger, eagerness, or the pleasure of seeing someone or something cute or adorable, typically manifested by the tight clenching of hands, gritting of the teeth, trembling of the body, or the pinching or squeezing of the person or thing causing this emotion.”
As for the adjective, Oxford Dictionary describes it as an emotion felt by a person “overwhelmed by an intense feeling caused by anger, eagerness, or the pleasure of seeing someone or something cute or adorable.”
Aside from “gigil,” the Oxford English Dictionary (OED) added 10 other Filipino words to the Philippine English category—totaling to eight (8) new words and three (3) added definitions to existing entries. Here are the other words that have been added:
CR
(noun) a toilet; a lavatory; comfort room.
Kababayan
(noun) A fellow Filipino; one’s fellow Filipino. A person from the same Philippine region or town as another.
(noun) A small, sweet cake, similar to a muffin, typically yellow in color, in the shape of a salakot.
Lumpia
(noun) In East and Southeast Asian cookery: any of various types of spring roll, typically consisting of a very thin pancake filled with minced meat, seafood, or vegetables, rolled into a cylinder (and sometimes deep-fried) and served with a dipping sauce.
Pinoy (This was added in 2006 and modified in March 2025.)
(noun) A (usually male) native or inhabitant of the Philippines; a person of Filipino descent.
(adjective) Of, belonging to, or relating to the Philippines or Filipinos.
Salakot
(noun) A type of lightweight Filipino hat traditionally worn by farmers as protection against the weather, typically domed or conical in shape, with a wide brim and often having a spiked or ornamental finial at the tip of the crown.
Sando
(noun) A sleeveless garment worn under or instead of a shirt; a vest.
Thomasite
(noun) An American teacher in the Philippines during the period of American occupation (1899=1946); esp. one belonging to the first group of teachers who arrived on the U.S. Army Transport Thomas in 1901, tasked with establishing a new public school system, teaching basic education, training Filipino teachers, using English as the primary language of instruction.
Videoke
(noun) A form of entertainment popular in bars, at parties, etc., in which a person sings the vocal line of a popular song to the accompaniment of a pre-recorded backing tape while following the lyrics which appear on a screen in time with the music. Also, the equipment used for this.
Load
(noun) Credit purchased for a pay-as-you-go mobile phone.
Terror
(adjective) A teacher that’s strict, harsh, or demanding.
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