😤317+ Annoyed Kaomoji — Irritated, Fed Up & Unamused Text Faces
The best collection of annoyed and irritated kaomoji online. Express mild frustration, eye-rolling, and that "I'm so done" feeling with Japanese text emoticons. Perfect for petty frustrations, slow Wi-Fi, spoiled plans, and when people just won't stop talking. Copy and paste instantly into Discord, TikTok, iMessage, WhatsApp, and X (Twitter).
人気のうんざり・イライラ顔文字
📂他のカテゴリ
うんざり・イライラ 顔文字一覧
うんざり・イライラ 顔文字の使い方
- •When someone keeps repeating themselves in group chats
- •React to slow Wi-Fi or laggy games on Discord
- •Express mild frustration at work on Slack
- •When plans get cancelled last minute on WhatsApp
- •Respond to annoying spoilers on social media
- •When someone sends too many messages at 3 AM
- •Express "not amused" reactions on TikTok comments
- •Petty responses in friend group chats on iMessage
- •React to bad takes on X (Twitter)
- •When autocorrect ruins your message again
- •Respond to unsolicited advice on Reddit
- •When your food delivery is late again
💡Annoyed Kaomoji Trivia
Irritating facts about grumpy text faces and frustration expression
The Vein Pop
In manga, a cross-shaped mark (💢) on a character's forehead represents a popping vein from irritation. Annoyed kaomoji like (#`Д´) use the # symbol to mimic this — a uniquely Japanese visual shorthand for controlled anger.
Annoyance vs. Anger
Japanese emotional vocabulary distinguishes 'iraira' (イライラ, irritation) from 'ikari' (怒り, anger). Annoyed kaomoji fill this important gap — they express mild frustration without the intensity of full-blown angry faces.
The Flat Mouth
The halfwidth katakana 'ー' is used as a flat, unamused mouth in annoyed kaomoji like (¬_¬). This single horizontal line perfectly captures the 'I am not impressed' expression recognized worldwide.
Workplace Communication
Annoyed kaomoji are strategically used in Japanese workplace messaging to express displeasure politely. A well-placed (¬_¬) communicates frustration while maintaining professional harmony — essential in Japan's indirect communication culture.
よくある質問
- Q. What are annoyed kaomoji?
- Annoyed kaomoji express mild irritation and frustration — relatable for life's small aggravations.
- Q. When should I use annoyed kaomoji?
- Use them when mildly irritated, when something minor goes wrong, or to vent with humor.
- Q. What are examples of annoyed kaomoji?
- (¬_¬) (side eye) and (-_-;) (ugh) are perfect for annoyance.
- Q. Are annoyed kaomoji free to copy and paste?
- Yes — every annoyed kaomoji on kaomojis.jp (( ̄ヘ ̄), (¬_¬), (-_-メ), (╯°□°)╯) is 100% free to copy and paste with no sign-up. One tap copies to your clipboard; paste into Discord, WhatsApp, iMessage, TikTok, Instagram, X (Twitter), Slack or any plain-text field for instant relatable reactions【2026】.
- Q. What is the best annoyed kaomoji for "I'm so done" group chat moments?
- Try ( ̄ヘ ̄) for classic tired-of-this vibes, (╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻ for the iconic flip-the-table reaction, or (-_-;) for awkward exhaustion. These work perfectly in WhatsApp/LINE group chats when venting about work, homework, or everyday frustrations.
- Q. Which irritated text face works for Discord server mod moments?
- For moderators dealing with rule-breakers, (¬_¬) conveys "I see what you did" dryness, (-_-メ) signals "last warning" seriousness, and (ಠ_ಠ) delivers the classic "disappointed stare." Use sparingly in mod announcements for effect.
- Q. How do I use fed up kaomoji in TikTok comments?
- For relatable "me too" energy on annoying situations, drop ( ̄ヘ ̄), (¬_¬), or (-_-;) in TikTok comments to boost engagement. They translate universally and often get pinned because commenters recognize them as "this is me" reactions.
- Q. What annoyed kaomoji works when coworkers keep asking the same question?
- ( ̄ヘ ̄) communicates polite exasperation without being mean, (¬_¬) signals "really?" dryness, and (•ᴗ•)ゞ ←actually frustrated works for passive-aggressive humor. Use in private team Slack channels, never in formal emails.
- Q. Are annoyed kaomoji okay in professional Slack channels?
- In casual team Slack yes — "( ̄ヘ ̄) this meeting could've been an email" is relatable workplace humor. For client-facing or formal Slack channels, stick to plain text. Most tech startups embrace kaomoji as part of team culture【2026】.
- Q. Which annoyed kaomoji are trending for 2026 relatable content?
- For 2026, trending annoyed kaomoji include ( ̄ヘ ̄) (classic sigh), (╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻ (table flip revival), and (-_-;) (awkward exhaustion). They pair perfectly with "POV you're the only adult in the room" TikTok videos and Twitter/X daily-life rants【2026】.
- Q. How do annoyed kaomoji differ from angry kaomoji?
- Annoyed kaomoji ( ̄ヘ ̄, ¬_¬, -_-;) express mild frustration, exasperation, and "ugh" moods — everyday relatable vibes. Angry kaomoji (凸( ̄ヘ ̄)凸, ヽ(o`皿´o)ノ, (╬ಠ益ಠ)) express strong rage and confrontation. Choose based on intensity — annoyed for daily mild frustration, angry for genuine conflict.
- Q. Can I use annoyed kaomoji on LinkedIn posts?
- For personal-brand LinkedIn posts about work-life struggles or humorous observations, yes — ( ̄ヘ ̄) can humanize your content. For formal thought-leadership or job-search posts, stick to plain text. Test by reading your post aloud: if the kaomoji feels natural, it fits.
- Q. What annoyed kaomoji work for "Monday morning energy" WhatsApp statuses?
- (-_-;) for sleepy-frustrated, ( ̄ヘ ̄) for "here we go again", and (๑•﹏•) for gentle dismay. Pair with "Mondays... ( ̄ヘ ̄)" or "5 more days (-_-;)" for relatable weekly status updates on WhatsApp, LINE Timeline, or Instagram Story text.
- Q. Which annoyed kaomoji suit meme accounts on Instagram?
- (╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻ is the iconic meme kaomoji for dramatic "I give up" moments, (¬_¬) works for "bro really?" dryness, and (ಠ_ಠ) delivers Reddit-style disappointment. Meme accounts use these in caption overlays and comment replies for consistent style.
- Q. Are annoyed kaomoji suitable for customer service complaint DMs?
- In casual brand DMs (friendly, indie companies) yes — ( ̄ヘ ̄) can humanize a complaint. For formal corporate complaints, keep it plain text. If you're the customer service rep, avoid annoyed kaomoji in replies — use empathetic ones like (;ω;) instead.