πŸ˜“

πŸ˜“ downcast face with sweat Emoji β€” Meaning, Copy & Paste

Quick info

Unicode
U+1F613
Shortcode
:downcast-face-with-sweat:
Category
Smileys & Emotion
Subcategory
concerned
Added in
Unicode 0.6
Also known as
exhausted emoji, tired sweat emoji, hard work emoji, worn out emoji, effort face emoji

What Does the downcast face with sweat Emoji πŸ˜“ Mean?

Head tilted, single sweat drop prominently showing, expression weighed down β€” πŸ˜“ is the emoji of difficult effort, exertion, or struggling through something hard. It's not the panicked sweat of 😰 or the nervous-relief sweat of πŸ˜…. This is the exhausted sweat β€” the one that comes after sustained effort or a difficult emotional situation.

In texting, πŸ˜“ appears in contexts of sustained difficulty. "Working on this for six hours straight πŸ˜“." "Finally got through that conversation πŸ˜“." "Running on three hours of sleep and trying to function πŸ˜“." The sweat drop signals the effort; the downcast expression signals the cost.

There's also an emotional-labor version: πŸ˜“ when a hard conversation happened and you're processing the weight of it. Not crisis β€” just the specific tiredness that comes from handling something difficult with care.

The distinction from 😰 matters. 😰 is anxiety before something hard. πŸ˜“ is the fatigue of going through or having gone through it. One is anticipatory; the other is the depletion that follows effort.

Gen Z uses πŸ˜“ in both literal (physical exhaustion) and emotional (relationship-labor, difficult conversations, sustained effort) contexts. It's an honest emoji β€” not dramatic, just tired.

On social media, πŸ˜“ appears in exhaustion-content posts: late nights, hard weeks, emotionally taxing situations. It pairs naturally with relatable "I'm barely holding it together" content without tipping into crisis signals.

Unicode 6.0, 2010. The prominent sweat drop and downward tilt of the face render clearly on all platforms. Apple's version has particularly expressive tired eyes.

Use πŸ˜“ for: physical exhaustion after effort, emotional depletion, or the specific tiredness of having done something hard.

Apple renders the prominent sweat drop and downward tilt with particular emotional accuracy - the combination of exhaustion and effort reads clearly. Google and Samsung follow similar designs. The specific emotional register of this emoji - sustained effort and the cost it carries - is one that doesn't have many other options in the emoji vocabulary, which makes it particularly useful. It's the face of having gotten through something difficult, not in triumph but in genuine depletion. In caregiving communities it appears often, expressing the specific tiredness that comes from sustained emotional labor. In academic and professional contexts it marks the period just after a major deliverable - not celebrating (that would be partying-face) but honestly acknowledging that it took something out of you. The sweat drop is the key visual element and reads clearly even at small display sizes.

How to Use πŸ˜“ downcast face with sweat Emoji

“Ten-hour editing session and I'm barely coherent πŸ˜“”
“Finally had the talk I've been avoiding for weeks πŸ˜“”
“This week has just been relentless πŸ˜“”
Technical Details
UnicodeU+1F613
HTML Entity😓
CSS Code\1F613
Shortcode:downcast-face-with-sweat:
Keywordsclose, cold, downcast, face, feels, headache, nervous, sad, scared, sweat, yikes, with
Unicode Version0.6

Frequently Asked Questions

What does πŸ˜“ mean in texting?

πŸ˜“ means exhaustion from sustained effort or a difficult situation β€” the sweat and downcast expression show someone depleted after working through something hard. It's the tired-after emoji, not the anxious-before emoji.

What's the difference between πŸ˜“ and 😰?

😰 is anxious anticipation before something difficult. πŸ˜“ is the depletion after going through it. One braces for impact; the other recovers from it. Same sweat, different timing in the emotional arc.

How is πŸ˜“ used in relatable exhaustion content?

On Instagram and TikTok, πŸ˜“ appears in 'I'm barely making it' relatable content β€” long work weeks, exhausting life phases, difficult conversations. It's honest without being alarming, tired without being dramatic.