🌜️

🌜️ last quarter moon face Emoji β€” Meaning, Copy & Paste

Quick info

Unicode
U+1F31C U+FE0F
Shortcode
:last-quarter-moon-face:
Category
Travel & Places
Subcategory
weather
Added in
Unicode 0.7
Also known as
Waning moon face, Half moon face, Last quarter crescent, Evening moon, Reverse half moon

What Does the last quarter moon face Emoji 🌜️ Mean?

The mirror image of its first quarter sibling, the last quarter moon face shows a half-illuminated moon with the bright side on the left β€” indicating the moon's waning phase as it moves from full back toward new. Like the first quarter face, it is a friendly, anthropomorphic representation of a lunar phase, but its position in the cycle gives it slightly different associations.

The last quarter moon phase occurs roughly three weeks into the lunar cycle, after the full moon has passed and the moon is now decreasing in illumination. In astrological and moon-tracking traditions, the last quarter is associated with release, letting go, reflection, and drawing inward before the cycle begins again. Content tagged with the last quarter face in spiritual communities often reflects on what needs to be released or completed before the next new moon.

In everyday casual use, the last quarter moon face serves many of the same purposes as the first quarter β€” nighttime messages, evening ambiance, moon-adjacent aesthetics. The subtle directional difference between πŸŒ› and 🌜 is mostly meaningful only to those who track lunar phases specifically; in general use, both moon faces fill similar conversational roles.

The last quarter moon is visible in the early morning hours in the western sky before sunrise, which gives it a slightly "winding down" or contemplative quality β€” the moon you see when you are up too late or very early in the morning, before the world has quite woken up. That pre-dawn, quiet-hour energy colors some of its informal uses.

Like all the moon face emojis, the last quarter benefits from its human-like face β€” it gives the abstract astronomical phenomenon a warm, accessible personality that makes it much more conversationally useful than a purely scientific representation would be.

Apple renders the waning half-moon with the illuminated side on the left and a similarly relaxed expression to its first-quarter sibling. Google and Samsung follow similar designs. The waning quality of this moon phase - energy moving from full back toward dark - gives it associations with release, completion, and letting go in lunar and spiritual communities. Its visual similarity to the first quarter face can cause confusion for people unfamiliar with which side represents waxing versus waning, but moon-phase followers know the distinction immediately. In evening and late-night social media posts it appears alongside content about winding down, reflection, and the particular contemplative quality of nights when the moon is shrinking rather than growing.

How to Use 🌜️ last quarter moon face Emoji

“Late-night reflection: "Can't sleep, lying here thinking about everything 🌜"”
“Lunar cycle content: "Last quarter moon β€” perfect time to release what's no longer serving you 🌜"”
“Evening wind-down: "Long day finally over, ready to rest 🌜"”
Technical Details
UnicodeU+1F31C U+FE0F
HTML Entity🌜️
CSS Code\1F31C
Shortcode:last-quarter-moon-face:
Keywordsdreams, face, last, moon, quarter
Unicode Version0.7

Frequently Asked Questions

What does 🌜 mean in texting?

The last quarter moon face is used for nighttime and evening contexts β€” good-night messages, late-night posts, and contemplative night thoughts. In astrology and spiritual communities, it specifically represents the last quarter lunar phase, associated with release and reflection.

What is the difference between 🌜 and πŸŒ›?

🌜 (last quarter moon face) has the illuminated side on the left and represents the waning phase β€” the moon is decreasing in illumination. πŸŒ› (first quarter moon face) has the illuminated side on the right and represents the waxing phase. Both have human faces and are used for nighttime vibes, but differ in lunar cycle position.

Can I use 🌜 and πŸŒ› interchangeably?

In casual conversation, yes β€” most people do not distinguish between the two in everyday messaging and use them interchangeably for general moon or nighttime content. Only in lunar phase-specific contexts (astrology, moon journaling) does the directional difference carry distinct meaning.