The act of male masturbation in which the man positions his testicles between his ass and a hard surface— effectively sitting on his balls and squishing them. Pagging often results in extreme pain.
by Maxocheese April 10, 2024
Get the Paggingmug. by k.surando September 27, 2023
Get the pagmug. by your mum gaming April 6, 2021
Get the Paggedmug. by anonymouseGKM December 11, 2021
Get the Pagmug. Pag pag is also know as paddy. Pag pag is a very nice and kind person but sometimes he goes too far. Pag pag or paddy will seldom go out with out without a fight.
Is that pag pag pulling another beour
Is that pag pag pulling another Asian wan
Is that paddy meeting Irene?
Is that pag pag pulling another Asian wan
Is that paddy meeting Irene?
by benbourke@gmail.com October 30, 2018
Get the Pag Pagmug. Pagging pah-ging
noun (Filipino slang, humorous)
Definition:
1. A Filipino person whose parents are from two major ethnolinguistic groups: one Tagalog, the other Bisaya.
2. A cultural fusion of the Tagalog’s gritty city survival and the Bisaya’s earthy wild energy.
3. A mashup of “pagpag” and “saging,” used comically to describe the chaotic, beautiful blend of both heritages.
Etymology / Word Origin:
Pag – from pagpag, leftover food (usually meat or chicken) scavenged from trash, cleaned, and recooked. Often associated with impoverished urban areas in Luzon, where many Tagalogs live.
Ging – from saging, the Bisaya word for banana. Bisaya people are humorously (and very inaccurately) portrayed as being so connected to nature they "goon into banana trees" — a meme-worthy exaggeration.
Together: Pag + Ging = Pagging.
A dual-core Filipino with the street smarts of pagpag and the jungle instinct of saging.
Cultural Note:
Tagalog – Typically raised in Luzon, speaking the Tagalog language as their mother tongue.
Bisaya – Refers to several Visayan-speaking groups found in Visayas and Mindanao. Those from the Visayas are considered to speak the “original” Bisaya dialect.
noun (Filipino slang, humorous)
Definition:
1. A Filipino person whose parents are from two major ethnolinguistic groups: one Tagalog, the other Bisaya.
2. A cultural fusion of the Tagalog’s gritty city survival and the Bisaya’s earthy wild energy.
3. A mashup of “pagpag” and “saging,” used comically to describe the chaotic, beautiful blend of both heritages.
Etymology / Word Origin:
Pag – from pagpag, leftover food (usually meat or chicken) scavenged from trash, cleaned, and recooked. Often associated with impoverished urban areas in Luzon, where many Tagalogs live.
Ging – from saging, the Bisaya word for banana. Bisaya people are humorously (and very inaccurately) portrayed as being so connected to nature they "goon into banana trees" — a meme-worthy exaggeration.
Together: Pag + Ging = Pagging.
A dual-core Filipino with the street smarts of pagpag and the jungle instinct of saging.
Cultural Note:
Tagalog – Typically raised in Luzon, speaking the Tagalog language as their mother tongue.
Bisaya – Refers to several Visayan-speaking groups found in Visayas and Mindanao. Those from the Visayas are considered to speak the “original” Bisaya dialect.
“Wag mo ko maliitin, pare. I’m Pagging — I can survive with pagpag and climb banana trees with my bare hands.”
by Ambatunat August 4, 2025
Get the Paggingmug. 