Apr 23 Word of the Day
1. noun. It is the sudden feeling of an inexplicable joy one gets when something romantic or idealistic occurs.
When kilig, one may experience the following:
*butterflies in one's stomach
*heart melting
*shivers down one's spine
*irrepressible noises from one's mouth
*uncontrollable smiling
*an inner conflict between hope of something wished for and reality
Kilig may also be defined as that mountain top, floating, on cloud nine, invincible, i-could-keep-smiling, heart aching goodness and feeling which overpowers the mind's ability to think straight, act straight, breathe properly and articulate thoughts into a single comprehensible sentence.
When kilig, one may experience the following:
*butterflies in one's stomach
*heart melting
*shivers down one's spine
*irrepressible noises from one's mouth
*uncontrollable smiling
*an inner conflict between hope of something wished for and reality
Kilig may also be defined as that mountain top, floating, on cloud nine, invincible, i-could-keep-smiling, heart aching goodness and feeling which overpowers the mind's ability to think straight, act straight, breathe properly and articulate thoughts into a single comprehensible sentence.
KILIGS much?? ^_^
by mis2n.yoo June 07, 2011
2
"Inman" is a homophobic slur used to refer to a gay man. It references actor John Inman from the 1970/80s British ITV sitcom "Are You Being Served".
Set in a department store and with writing packed with double entendres and sexual innuendo, the show featured John Inman playing camp salesman Mr Humphries. This humour was in the vein of the "Carry On" films and specifically Kenneth Williams' characters therein.
The show spawned a catchphrase of the era: when asked by a colleague, "Mr. Humphries, are you free? to serve someone", he always gives the camp response, "I'm free!".
Set in a department store and with writing packed with double entendres and sexual innuendo, the show featured John Inman playing camp salesman Mr Humphries. This humour was in the vein of the "Carry On" films and specifically Kenneth Williams' characters therein.
The show spawned a catchphrase of the era: when asked by a colleague, "Mr. Humphries, are you free? to serve someone", he always gives the camp response, "I'm free!".
by PissOffKarl February 06, 2020