English

Etymology

From Korean 애교 (aegyo, “cuteness, charm, affectionate playfulness”) + English snare, in the figurative sense of a mental, emotional, or psychological trap.

Pronunciation

  • Hangul transliteration: 에교-스네어
  • Revised Romanization: egyo-seuneeo
  • IPA: /ˈe̞ɡjoʊˌsnɛər/

Noun

aegyo-snare (plural aegyo-snares)

  1. A mental or emotional trap created through deliberate cuteness; an act of aegyo used to ensnare someone's attention, affection, or romantic judgment.
  2. A flirtatious or affectionate display of exaggerated adorableness that catches, entangles, or disarms the target psychologically.
    Her round-eyed glance was not innocent; it was an aegyo-snare.
    The tiny pout, the soft voice, and the “aing” at the end formed a perfect aegyo-snare.

Synonyms

Verb

aegyo-snare (third-person singular simple present aegyo-snares, present participle aegyo-snaring, simple past and past participle aegyo-snared)

  1. To catch, entangle, or romantically disarm someone through aegyo.
    She aegyo-snared him with a wink and a suspiciously well-timed pout.
    He thought he was immune to cute voices, but the chorus aegyo-snared him immediately.

Derived terms