Overview

Interpretasyon
Overview
(`皿´#) is a kaomoji that looks like clenched-teeth anger, the kind of galit na pigil, pero obvious na mataas na ang inis. The 皿 mouth feels like tight teeth, while the # mark on the side looks like a comic anger vein. It gives off a vibe of someone trying to keep control, but clearly very, very annoyed.
Visual breakdown
- The parentheses ( and ) frame the face and keep the expression compact and intense.
- The ` and ´ marks work like sharp, slanted eyes or brows, pointing inward in an angry glare.
- The 皿 in the middle is a boxy mouth that reads as gritted teeth or a jaw locked in frustration.
- The full-width # at the end is a classic manga-style anger mark, like a pulsing vein when a character is super stressed or pissed.
Together, these elements create a face that says "I am extremely mad" without necessarily shouting out loud.
Emotional tone
(`皿´#) often expresses:
- Strong irritation and matinding inis at something unfair or repetitive
- Gritted-teeth anger when you are trying to stay "civil" but can’t hide your feelings
- A scolding, sermon-like mood toward someone who keeps doing the same mistake
- Serious but still a bit anime-dramatic rage that fits chat and social media style
Typical situations
- Calling out a friend who keeps making the same joke or prank kahit ilang beses mo nang sinabi.
- Complaining about canceled plans, sudden schedule changes or last-minute tasks.
- Reacting to app crashes, lag or lost progress when you are already pagod.
- Showing that you are not just mildly annoyed, but really fed up with what happened.
Use (`皿´#) when you want to show clenched-jaw anger in text: controlled, intense, and a little bit anime-level dramatic at the same time.
Usage guide
Tips
Using (`皿´#) in chats
(`皿´#) works well when your mood is more like "pinipigil ko pa, pero sobrang inis na ako". It shows clenched-jaw anger, not just light annoyance, and fits moments when you want your friend to know you are really not okay with what happened.
When to use
- When someone repeats the same behavior after ilang beses mo nang sinabi.
- After last-minute tasks, canceled plans or big changes that mess up your day.
- When lag, crash or bugs ruin your rank, project or progress.
- To half-jokingly scold a close friend for trolling or going too far with jokes.
- When you want to show stronger galit than a simple emoji can send.
When to avoid
- Skip (`皿´#) in talks about grief, mental health or serious family problems.
- Be careful using it with bosses, teachers or people who don’t know your humor.
- If the other person is already hurt, this kaomoji can feel like extra attack.
Sample lines
- "Binago na naman yung schedule ngayon lang (`皿´#)"
- "Sabi ko na wag mong galawin yung file sa prod (`皿´#)"
- "Pa-final boss na, biglang nag-crash yung game (`皿´#)"
- "Ilang beses na, inuulit mo pa rin (`皿´#)"
Use (`皿´#) when you want to send a clear, clenched-teeth kind of anger in text, but still wrapped in a slightly playful, anime-flavored style.
Usage examples
Real conversation samples that feature this kaomoji.

Example 1

Example 2