Chat
🫳 is strongest in chat because the body-language signal lands quickly in a short reply.
people & body · fingers open
🫳 reads like body language in a text bubble. It often feels clearer through the gesture itself than through any extra emotional nuance.
🫳 changes the line in a visible way, but it still depends on the surrounding words to finish the meaning.
🫳 is strongest in chat because the body-language signal lands quickly in a short reply.
Works in comments when the gesture itself is recognizable, such as applause, thanks, or a quick greeting.
Best in captions when the gesture supports the line instead of replacing the real message.
Choose 🫴 when the hand or pose should say something different: messages where palm up hand should be the exact signal instead of a loosely similar option. 🫳 stays closer to messages where palm down hand should be the exact signal instead of a loosely similar option.
Choose 🖐️ when the hand or pose should say something different: messages where hand with fingers splayed should be the exact signal instead of a loosely similar option. 🫳 stays closer to messages where palm down hand should be the exact signal instead of a loosely similar option.
Choose ✋️ when the hand or pose should say something different: messages where raised hand should be the exact signal instead of a loosely similar option. 🫳 stays closer to messages where palm down hand should be the exact signal instead of a loosely similar option.
Open palm up hand if you want a nearby image, gesture, symbol, or scene instead of repeating the same visual cue.
Use the meaning page when you know the intent first and still want to compare several valid options.
Category pages help when you know the general cluster but still need to compare neighboring emoji side by side.
Navigation, next steps, and interface labels.
Navigation, next steps, and interface labels.
Navigation, next steps, and interface labels.
Navigation, next steps, and interface labels.
Navigation, next steps, and interface labels.
The 🫳 emoji shows a palm facing down and often suggests dropping, lowering, dismissing, or placing something down. It can feel casual or slightly rejecting depending on tone. In texting, the important part is how it changes the tone of the sentence around it, not only the dictionary label.
Use 🫳 when the line already points in the same emotional or topical direction and you want the reader to feel that signal faster.
It usually misses when the emoji adds more intensity, intimacy, or attitude than the situation can support. The best check is whether the message still sounds right if you read it out loud with the emoji's tone in mind.
🫳 is a medium-strength signal on this page. 🫳 changes the line in a visible way, but it still depends on the surrounding words to finish the meaning.
🫴 palm up hand is one of the nearest alternatives because it overlaps in broad intent while shifting tone, intensity, or context.
That depends on the emoji, but the page now breaks it down by platform context because some emoji feel natural in chat and much louder or more decorative in captions or public replies.
If the emoji is close but not exact, open the sad meaning page or compare the nearby emoji links on this page before choosing.