π ββοΈ man gesturing NO Emoji β Meaning, Copy & Paste
Quick info
- Unicode
- U+1F645 U+200D U+2642 U+FE0F
- Shortcode
:man-gesturing-no:- Category
- People & Body
- Subcategory
- gestures
- Added in
- Unicode 4.0
- Also known as
- no man, refusing male, X arms guy, saying no man
What Does the man gesturing NO Emoji π ββοΈ Mean?
Putting his foot down, π ββοΈ the man gesturing NO emoji depicts a male figure with arms crossed in an X to signal firm refusal. Added in version 4.0 of the emoji standard, it provides explicit male representation for the 'no' gesture. People use it when a man is refusing, declining, or saying 'absolutely not' to something.
Common examples include 'My dad to anything fun π ββοΈ', 'Working overtime? π ββοΈ', or 'Not playing that game π ββοΈ.' It's perfect for dramatic male refusals β sports fans rejecting bad calls, dads vetoing kid requests, or just guys setting firm boundaries. The emoji is used in humorous content where men are shown being unwillingly dramatic about declining things. It's also serious in posts about saying no to toxic situations, peer pressure, or unwanted demands.
Coaches, mentors, and male public figures often appear in memes paired with this emoji when refusing or rejecting. Pair it with π« for full prohibition energy, with β for stop-it vibes, or with π€ for added frustration. Skin tone variants are available.
Some users employ it in self-referential posts about being a 'no-thanks' kind of person. The emoji works in both serious and playful contexts β sometimes really shutting something down, sometimes just exaggerating for laughs. Whether you're refusing politely, dramatizing a male refusal, or just channeling 'absolutely not' energy, this emoji delivers a clear, firm no.
How to Use π ββοΈ man gesturing NO Emoji
“Working Saturdays? π ββοΈ”
“My dad to anything risky π ββοΈ”
“Not happening today π ββοΈ”
Technical Details
| Unicode | U+1F645 U+200D U+2642 U+FE0F |
| HTML Entity | 🙅♂️ |
| CSS Code | \1F645 |
| Shortcode | :man-gesturing-no: |
| Keywords | forbidden, gesture, hand, man, no, not, prohibit, gesturing |
| Unicode Version | 4.0 |
Frequently Asked Questions
What does π ββοΈ mean?
It depicts a man with arms crossed in an X, signaling 'no,' refusal, rejection, or firm boundary-setting from a male figure.
How is π ββοΈ different from π ?
π was originally gender-neutral but often displayed as female on most platforms. π ββοΈ is the explicitly male version, added to provide clearer representation.
