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π Eyes: attention with side-eye
June 17, 2026 Β· 5:42 PM
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π works like a tiny tap on the shoulder: "look at this." Emojipedia describes it as a pair of eyes, usually glancing left, and notes that context can shift it toward shifty eyes or attraction; it was approved in Unicode 6.0 in 2010 and added to Emoji 1.0 in 2015. 1
Dictionary.com frames the common read as drawing attention, especially around drama or interpersonal tension. It can mean side-eye, "pay attention to this," or interest in someone attractive. 2
Card guide
- What it does: points attention at a post, clue, link, or moment.
- How combos shift it: π is plain notice; π? softens it into curiosity; ππΏ says "I am watching the drama"; πβ¨ turns it into quiet hype.
- Where it can misfire: in work chats, a bare π can feel like surveillance or a public call-out. Add a few words if the relationship is not already warm.
Culture note: real eye contact is not read the same way everywhere. Uono and Hietanen's cross-cultural study found differences in eye-contact perception between Finnish and Japanese participants, so it is safer to treat π as a tone nudge rather than a universal signal. 3
Combo reads here are practical editorial examples, not official definitions.

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