๐ต Meaning: The Japanese letter or character (ย ๆบ) printed on a red square that has rounded sides. This emoji is the negative opposite of the ๐ณ Japanese ‘Vacancy’ Button in both function and color.
The ๐ต Japanese ‘No Vacancy’ Button emoji character translates to ‘Mitsuru’ in Japanese and ‘Mวn’ in Chinese, meaning ‘full’ and ‘faint’ respectively. The Chinese version ought to be doubled to mean full.
Copy and paste this emoji:
How and When to Use the ๐ต Japanese ‘No Vacancy’ Button Emoji
- If you’re sharing a ‘limited edition’ or ‘limited entry’ post or repost that’s almost come to an end, given the growing entries or buyers, thus enclosing a jam-packed audience, you may use ๐ต in those contexts. Like, “Hurry up! Only 3 slots left ๐ต” or “Last one hour of the sale ๐ต”.
- You could also use ๐ต to support the variants of the present perspective of ‘full’. For instance, “I’ve eaten so much, I don’t think I have space for dessert ๐ต”, “The room was full of positive people ๐ต“ or “In a world full of social media statuses ๐ต be someone’s love letter”.
- While referring to something that’s jam-packed, tightly packed, or even suffocating, you could use ๐ต. For example, “I’m stuck in this horrendous traffic! ๐ต”, “Ensure all orders are tightly packed ๐ต” or “Her vibe is absolutely suffocating ๐ต”.
- Speaking of the positives of ‘full’, ๐ต would be apt for anything that’s wholesome and full – “Well disciplined humans are seriously so wholesome ๐ต” or “He’s so full of love and compassion ๐ต”.
Other Names
- ๐ต Mitsuru (Japanese)
- ๐ต Mวn (Chinese)
- ๐ต Full
- ๐ต No Vacancy
- ๐ต Tightly Packed/Jam Packed
- ๐ต Wholesome
- ๐ต Japanese Sign Meaning ‘Full; No Vacancy’
- ๐ต Squared CJK Unified Ideograph – 6e80