man gesturing NO Emoji
π ββοΈ shows a man making a βnoβ or refusal gesture.
U+1F645 U+200D U+2642 U+FE0F
π ββοΈ is the βman gesturing noβ emoji, often used to communicate refusal or disagreement. Itβs a quick way to add tone to messages without writing much. This page includes practical uses and copy/paste options.
man gesturing NO Emoji Meaning
The π ββοΈ emoji combines a βnoβ or refusal hand sign with a male figure. Itβs commonly used to communicate rejection, denial, or disagreementβlike saying βno,β βnot allowed,β βstop,β or βwe canβt do that.β Youβll also see it in warnings and boundaries, such as βno entry,β βdo not share,β or βnot permitted.β In casual chat, it can signal resistance or a playful βnot happening.β Context matters: the same gesture can be strict in policy text or lighthearted in friendly conversation.
Common uses
- β’To express refusal or disagreement in chat or comments
- β’To label content as βnot allowedβ or βprohibitedβ on websites and forms
- β’To add a warning tone (e.g., βstop,β βdo not,β βno entryβ) in announcements
- β’To communicate boundaries in workplace messages (e.g., βwe canβt approve thisβ)
- β’To indicate βnot availableβ or βnot supportedβ for features or requests
Examples
π ββοΈ Man Gesturing No
- π ββοΈNo thanksβπ ββοΈ not interested.
- π ββοΈπ ββοΈ This feature isnβt available in your plan.
- π ββοΈReminder: π ββοΈ Do not share personal information.
- π ββοΈWe canβt approve that requestβπ ββοΈ policy only.
- π ββοΈSorry, this access is restrictedβπ ββοΈ no entry.
Variations
Ready to copy
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+1F645 U+200D U+2642 U+FE0F | |
| HTML Entity | 🙅 | |
| HTML Code | 🙅 | |
| CSS | \1F645 |
FAQ
What does π ββοΈ mean?
It generally means βno,β refusal, rejection, or something is not allowedβusing a man making a βnoβ gesture.
When should I use π ββοΈ instead of other refusal emojis?
Use π ββοΈ when you want a clear refusal tone with a person/stance attached, especially in messages about permissions, restrictions, or disagreement.
How do I copy and use π ββοΈ in HTML or code?
HTML entity: 🙅. CSS escape: \\1F645. JavaScript escape: \\u{1F645 U+200D U+2642 U+FE0F}.
Does π ββοΈ always mean something serious?
Not always. In policy or warning text itβs usually strict, but in casual chat it can be playful or emphatic depending on context.