Words like "manspreading," "bants" and "hangry" are just three of the 1,000 new entries recently added to The Oxford Dictionary's free online dictionary.

On Thursday, the free online dictionary of current usage issued its quarterly update of 1,000 new words that have been added to OxfordDictionaries.com after becoming widespread in the English language, reports the Guardian.

Other new entries include NBD, an abbreviation of the phrase "no big deal," wine o'clock, which describes the time of day to start drinking the alcoholic beverages, and brain fart, a temporary mental lapse.

Meanwhile, manspreading is defined as a practice where men sit with their legs wide apart on public transportation and therefore, encroach on other seats. Bants is a common word used in the United Kingdom that is short for banter, and hangry is an adjective used to describe people who are irritable or angry due to hunger. According to Oxford Dictionary's language monitoring service, hangry first became popular in 2012 and then peaked in April 2014 following the release of an American study about how low glucose levels can cause people to become grouchy.

Another phrase added was mic drop, which in a literal sense is an "'instance of deliberately dropping or tossing aside one's microphone at the end of a performance or speech one considers to have been particularly impressive,' but it's more likely to be figurative - or an exclamation to emphasize a particularly impressive point," states OxfordDictionaries.com.

Other words on the list are butt dial, the act of calling someone accidentally when your mobile phone is in a rear pocket, and fatberg, "a very large mass of solid waste in a sewerage system, consisting especially of congealed fat and personal hygiene products that have been flushed down toilets," states CTV News.

Click here to see the full list: bit.ly/1LCtT3e