🤢

🤢 nauseated face Emoji — Meaning, Copy & Paste

Schnelle Informationen

Unicode
U+1F922
Kurzcode
:nauseated-face:
Kategorie
Smileys und Emotionen
Unterkategorie
unwell
Hinzugefügt am
Unicode 3.0
Auch bekannt als
sick emoji, nausea emoji, disgusted face emoji, green face emoji, gross emoji

What Does the nauseated face Emoji 🤢 Mean?

Green-faced, clearly unwell — 🤢 is the universal visual of nausea. The color says everything: green has been the color of illness in cultural depictions for so long it's practically a law. This emoji doesn't need context. You look at it and feel slightly sympathetic.

In texting, 🤢 covers a range of situations where something is genuinely revolting or where you feel physically ill. The literal use: "food poisoning has me 🤢 all night." The figurative use: "saw that news story 🤢 couldn't finish it." The "disgusted by a behavior or situation" use: "the way he acted at that meeting 🤢."

There's an interesting gradient in how 🤢 lands depending on delivery. In a health context it signals sympathy and concern. In a news/political context it signals moral disgust. In a reaction to bad food or a gross story, it's genuinely physical revulsion. All valid.

Social media uses 🤢 as a reaction emoji under content that's genuinely disturbing, disgusting, or ethically repugnant. Comment sections under difficult news or shocking behavior fill up with 🤢 quickly — it communicates collective disgust efficiently.

Gen Z uses 🤢 in layered ironic ways too: something so cringe it triggers a physical response. "That person's energy is genuinely 🤢." It's moved from strictly physical illness into a vibe-rating mechanism.

On platforms like TikTok, 🤢 under a video means either the content itself is disturbing or the behavior depicted is morally revolting. The emoji is context-sensitive enough that either reading can be correct.

Unicode 9.0, 2016. The green color is the key feature — it renders consistently across Apple, Google, and Samsung. All versions read as immediately sick.

Use 🤢 when: physically ill, genuinely disgusted, or when something is so bad your body registers it as toxic. It's unambiguous and honest.

Apple's green coloring is particularly vivid and immediate - the nausea reads in less than a second. Google renders it with similar green saturation. Samsung keeps the green while going slightly softer on the overall expression. In allergy and food intolerance communities, this is a frequently used practical emoji - communicating that something has made you physically ill with a level of specificity that "I don't feel well" lacks. The distinction between nauseated-face and face-vomiting matters: the former is the warning, the latter is the event. Sending nauseated-face gives people a chance to sympathize before the situation escalates; face-vomiting is the escalation. In commentary on bad design, poor decisions, or cringe content, nauseated-face is the more common choice because it's disgusted without being as graphically extreme.

How to Use 🤢 nauseated face Emoji

“The smell in that subway car was actually 🤢”
“Three days of this stomach bug and counting 🤢”
“Read the whole story and felt genuinely 🤢”
Technische Details
UnicodeU+1F922
HTML-Entität🤢
CSS-Code\1F922
Kurzcode:nauseated-face:
Schlüsselwörterface, gross, nasty, nauseated, sick, vomit
Unicode-Version3.0

Häufig gestellte Fragen

What does 🤢 mean in texting?

🤢 means nausea or disgust — the green face signals physical illness, but it's also used for moral or situational disgust. When someone or something is revolting enough to trigger a physical response, 🤢 is the emoji for that.

Is 🤢 used for actual sickness or just disgust?

Both. Literal sickness: 'I've been 🤢 all night.' Figurative disgust: 'That story made me 🤢.' Gen Z also uses it as a vibe descriptor — something or someone with genuinely bad energy can earn a 🤢.

How is 🤢 used on social media?

On TikTok and Twitter, 🤢 appears under disturbing, disgusting, or ethically revolting content. It's a collective disgust signal — one of the most direct reaction emojis for 'this made me feel physically unwell.'