verb General Slang

Wig Out

/wɪɡ aʊt/ · verb · slang

To lose your cool, freak out, or get wildly excited.

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Definitions

1

To behave in an eccentric or unrestrained way.

“After three sodas and no sleep, he just wigged out.”
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2

To lose emotional control, panic, or go a little crazy.

“She totally wigged out when she heard the news.”
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3

To become intensely excited or enthusiastic about something.

“The crowd wigged out when the band hit the stage.”
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Wig Out In A Sentence

Don't wig out, it's only a fender scratch.
The whole malt shop wigged out over the new 45.
My folks are gonna wig out when they see my report card.

Origin & Usage

Slang rooted in 1940s-50s jazz and Black American hipster culture, where the 'wig' stood for the head or mind; to 'wig out' was to lose one's mind. It crossed into white teen and rock-n-roll slang during the 1950s.

People Also Ask

What does wig out mean in slang?

It means to lose your composure, panic, or get extremely excited — to 'lose your mind' in either a bad or thrilling way.

Where did wig out come from?

It came from 1940s-50s jazz and Black American hipster slang, where 'wig' meant the head or mind, and crossed into mainstream teen talk in the 1950s.

Is wig out positive or negative?

It can be either — wigging out can mean freaking out from stress or going wild with excitement, depending on context.

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