πŸ™…

πŸ™… person gesturing NO Emoji β€” Meaning, Copy & Paste

Quick info

Unicode
U+1F645
Shortcode
:person-gesturing-no:
Category
People & Body
Subcategory
gestures
Added in
Unicode 0.6
Also known as
no gesture, refusal, X arms, forbidden gesture

What Does the person gesturing NO Emoji πŸ™… Mean?

Crossing arms in a firm 'X' shape, πŸ™… the person gesturing NO emoji has been signaling refusal since Unicode 6.0. It depicts a person with their forearms crossed over their head, the universal sign for 'no,' 'forbidden,' or 'absolutely not.' People use it constantly to refuse, decline, or veto something with extra emphasis. Common examples include 'Drama in my life? πŸ™…', 'Working on the weekend? πŸ™…', or 'Not today, no thanks πŸ™….' It's stronger than a simple 'no' β€” it conveys finality and visual drama.

The gesture is internationally recognized, especially in Japan where it's commonly used to politely but firmly refuse something. In social media, it's a favorite for posts about boundary-setting, refusing toxic situations, or rejecting bad ideas. Memes have embraced it for dramatic 'absolutely not' moments, like 'Me when someone suggests Monday meetings πŸ™….' Some platforms display this emoji as feminine by default, leading Unicode to introduce gendered variants πŸ™…β€β™‚οΈ and πŸ™…β€β™€οΈ for clarity.

Pair it with 😀 for full refusal energy, with 🚫 for prohibition vibes, or with βœ‹ for stop-gesture themes. Skin-tone variants are available. The emoji also pops up in 'no thanks' replies, like saying no to extra work, party invitations, or unwanted advice.

Whether you're shutting down a bad idea, setting a boundary, or just dramatically rejecting something, this gesture says 'no' with style and clarity.

How to Use πŸ™… person gesturing NO Emoji

“Working weekends? πŸ™…”
“Drama in my life πŸ™…”
“Absolutely not πŸ™…”
Technical Details
UnicodeU+1F645
HTML Entity🙅
CSS Code\1F645
Shortcode:person-gesturing-no:
Keywordsforbidden, gesture, hand, no, not, person, prohibit, gesturing
Unicode Version0.6

Frequently Asked Questions

What does πŸ™… mean?

It depicts a person with crossed arms forming an X, used to signal 'no,' refuse, reject, or set firm boundaries with visual emphasis.

Is πŸ™… used the same way in Japan?

Yes, originally β€” the X-arm gesture is commonly used in Japan to politely refuse something. The emoji reflects this cultural origin and remains widely understood internationally.