😊 EmojiCopy
Home/Smileys & Emotion/Face With Crossed-out Eyes
😵

😵 Face With Crossed-out Eyes

Smileys & Emotion

😵 Face With Crossed-out Eyes Meaning

The dizzy face emoji shows a face with eyes represented by X marks, indicating unconsciousness or extreme dizziness. It often has a straight, neutral mouth, though some platforms show it with a slightly open mouth. This emoji typically represents being knocked out, extremely dizzy, or unconscious. It can also symbolize shock, disbelief, or being overwhelmed to the point of collapse. Used in texting and social media to express being overwhelmed, exhausted, or shocked. It's also commonly used humorously to indicate someone has been 'knocked out' by something amazing or terrible. The dizzy face was added to Unicode in 2010 as part of Emoji 1.0. It's one of the earliest emojis and has maintained a relatively consistent design across platforms.

When to Use

Use the dizzy face emoji to express feeling extremely dizzy, overwhelmed, or knocked out. It's perfect for showing exhaustion after a long day, shock at surprising news, or humorously indicating you've been 'knocked out' by something amazing or terrible. It's versatile for both serious and humorous contexts but should be used sparingly in professional communications.

Examples

  • I just worked 12 hours straight 😵
  • That roller coaster made me pass out 😵
  • When you see your final exam after no sleep 😵
  • My brain after trying to assemble IKEA furniture 😵
  • The party last night was so wild I almost fainted 😵

How It Looks on Different Platforms

The Face With Crossed-out Eyes emoji may look different across platforms and devices.

😵 on Apple
Apple
iOS / macOS
😵 on Google
Google
Noto Emoji
😵 on Samsung
Samsung
One UI
😵 on Twitter/X
Twitter/X
Twemoji
😵 on Facebook
Facebook
Meta Emoji
😵 on Microsoft
Microsoft
Fluent Emoji
😵 on WhatsApp
WhatsApp
WhatsApp Emoji

Unicode Information

Code PointU+1F635
HTML Entity😵
CSS Escape\1F635
Unicode Version6.0
iOS Version6.0

Details

Aliasesdizzy_face

Explore Emoji Categories