A feeling so intense it overflows into the body.
A feeling so intense it overflows into the body — most often set off by something almost painfully cute — leaving you wanting to ball your fists, clench your jaw, or squeeze whatever you find so adorable. The same word also names the teeth-gritting charge of bottled-up frustration.
Somatic and quasi-aggressive — the body wants to squeeze or clench, not merely cherish, unlike plain tenderness or affection. It maps onto the psychological concept of “cute aggression.” Crucially not exclusively positive: Filipinos also feel gigil from suppressed anger or frustration.
Roughly “the trembling / gritting urge.”
Borrowed into Philippine English from Tagalog gigil “gritting of teeth; trembling with barely contained emotion.” A native Tagalog root.
Added to the Oxford English Dictionary in the March 2025 update (one of several Philippine-English loanwords), entered as both noun and adjective, with earliest English evidence dated to 1990.
Popular coverage often flattens gigil to “cute aggression” only, omitting its long-standing anger/frustration sense.