凸(`⌒´メ)凸
Double Middle Finger
A angry kaomoji text face. Copy and paste this Japanese text emoticon anywhere.
Works everywhere: social media, messages, documents
About this Kaomoji
The Double Middle Finger kaomoji is a Japanese text emoticon from the angry category. Kaomoji are text-based emoticons made from Unicode characters that can be read without tilting your head, unlike Western emoticons.
This angry kaomoji uses a combination of punctuation marks, letters, and special Unicode characters to create an expressive face that conveys angry emotions. Unlike standard emojis which render as images, kaomoji are pure text and work in any environment that supports Unicode characters, including older devices, plain text emails, and code editors.
Tags
When to Use
The Double Middle Finger kaomoji (凸(`⌒´メ)凸) is perfect for:
- •Text messages and chat conversations where you want to express angry feelings
- •Social media posts and comments on Twitter, Reddit, Discord, and Tumblr
- •Online forums and communities where kaomoji are part of the culture
- •Creative writing, usernames, and bio descriptions for a playful touch
Angry Kaomoji Origins
Among the many ways to convey this feeling digitally, this kaomoji stands out for capturing angry emotions through the Double Middle Finger face.
Angry kaomoji channel frustration through aggressive character choices: sharp angles, clenched marks, and table-flipping gestures. The veins-popping symbol (╬) borrowed from manga conventions, furrowed brows made from accent marks, and raised fists constructed from parentheses create a visual vocabulary of rage that ranges from mild annoyance to explosive fury.
The iconic table flip kaomoji (╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻ emerged from 2channel around 2002 and became one of the most recognized text emoticons globally. Angry kaomoji drew heavily from manga and anime visual conventions, where exaggerated anger is expressed through popping veins, sharp teeth, and dramatic gestures. This cross-pollination between print manga and digital text culture created a uniquely Japanese anger vocabulary.
Expressing anger directly is generally avoided in Japanese face-to-face communication, making angry kaomoji an important outlet for frustration in online spaces where anonymity provides social cover. Western internet culture tends to express anger through capitalization and exclamation marks, while Japanese users developed an elaborate visual system. The table flip spread globally because it transcended language, offering a universal gesture of exasperation that resonated across cultures.