🀀

🀀 drooling face Emoji β€” Meaning, Copy & Paste

Quick info

Unicode
U+1F924
Shortcode
:drooling-face:
Category
Smileys & Emotion
Subcategory
sleepy
Added in
Unicode 3.0
Also known as
drool emoji, hungry emoji, desire emoji, craving emoji, food lust emoji

What Does the drooling face Emoji 🀀 Mean?

Eyes glazed with desire, a thin stream of drool escaping β€” 🀀 is appetite made visible. Literal hunger, figurative hunger, the physical response to something so appealing your body can't contain itself. It's undignified in exactly the right way.

In food contexts, 🀀 is the heavyweight champion. When someone posts a meal photo that looks incredible, 🀀 is the only response that does it justice. It says "my physical reaction to this image was involuntary." No other emoji communicates that specific visceral hunger β€” not πŸ˜‹ (which is enjoying food), not 😍 (which is admiring), but 🀀 (which is want, now, immediately).

But 🀀 has moved well past food. In attraction contexts, 🀀 is explicit β€” it's physical desire expressed without subtlety. "He walked in looking like that 🀀." "Your playlist this week has me 🀀." The drool is metaphorical but unmistakable: this is attractive and my body knows it.

There's an interesting range from playful to intense. Between friends looking at food, 🀀 is playful and hunger-driven. Between people with clear attraction, 🀀 has more heat. The same symbol, calibrated by context.

On food-focused social media, 🀀 is universal. A chef posts a stunning dish: 🀀 floods the comments. A food influencer shares a restaurant recommendation: 🀀 and the restaurant's booking page gets overwhelmed. TikTok food content exists in permanent 🀀 territory.

Gen Z uses 🀀 broadly for anything aspirational and desire-triggering: travel content, luxury items, goals, aesthetics. "The apartment in that video 🀀." The drool signals want rather than food hunger specifically.

Unicode 8.0, 2015. The key feature β€” the drool β€” renders clearly across Apple, Google, and Samsung, though the exact positioning varies. All versions read immediately as desire.

Apple renders the drool trail very clearly - one distinctive stream from the corner of the mouth, half-glazed eyes. Google and Samsung keep the same design concept with minor visual variations. Beyond food, the drooling face has developed strong ties to desire in general: cars, travel destinations, luxury items, attractive people all earn it. The physical honesty of the drool is part of its appeal - you're not pretending to be composed. In communities where performative restraint is the norm, dropping a drooling face under something genuinely desirable feels refreshingly unfiltered. One note on platform differences: on some older Samsung devices the expression reads as more surprised than desirous, so context matters when sending to Android users who might be on older operating systems. Overall this is a safe, fun emoji with no negative cultural baggage, and its appeal is nearly universal across age groups and communication styles.

How to Use 🀀 drooling face Emoji

“That risotto video has me planning a whole trip to Italy 🀀”
“The way this fit came together 🀀”
“He walked into the meeting and I lost my train of thought 🀀”
Technical Details
UnicodeU+1F924
HTML Entity🤤
CSS Code\1F924
Shortcode:drooling-face:
Keywordsdrooling, face
Unicode Version3.0

Frequently Asked Questions

What does 🀀 mean in texting?

🀀 means strong desire or craving β€” it's the physical, involuntary response to something you want intensely. Originally food-focused, it now covers attraction, aspirational content, and anything that triggers immediate want.

Is 🀀 always about food?

No β€” while it originated in food contexts, 🀀 is now used for any form of intense desire: physical attraction, aspirational goals, luxury items, travel destinations. The drool is metaphorical for 'I want this so badly.'

How is 🀀 used on food social media?

On Instagram and TikTok food content, 🀀 is one of the top reactions β€” it signals that the food looks so good the viewer had a physical reaction. Food influencers, recipe creators, and chefs regularly receive floods of 🀀 under great content.