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( ´ ▽ ` )ノ

손 흔드는 카오모지 가이드: 안녕, 안녕히가세요 그리고 그 사이의 모든 것

카오모지로 손 흔드는 제스처를 표현하는 방법 가이드. ノ 기호가 팔 표현을 만드는 방법과 일본 문화의 절과 손 흔들기의 차이.

| Last updated: 2026-06-04

1. 텍스트에서의 손 흔들기 제스처 — 왜 "ノ"가 손이 되나

When expressing waving in text, Japanese kaomoji adopted the katakana character ノ. This symbol is a line extending diagonally upward to the right, corresponding to the silhouette of a raised arm. In (・_・)ノ, (・_・) represents the face and ノ represents the raised hand. A more vigorous wave can be expressed as ヾ(・_・)ノ with characters on both sides for a two-handed banzai pose. The ノ on the right side alone corresponds to the natural one-handed waving gesture of "goodbye" or "I'm off," and has become established as a symbolic representation of the "bye-bye" scene in Japanese manga and anime. This technique of "expressing a body part with a single symbol" is the core idea of kaomoji, achieving rich facial expressions and movement by mapping mouth, eyes, eyebrows, hands, and feet to various symbols.

2. 안녕 및 환영 카오모지 — 만남의 순간을 텍스트로

Waving kaomoji used in hello/greeting scenes: Light greeting: (^_^)ノ, (・∀・)ノ — simple, bright greeting. Energetic hello: ヾ(^▽^*)ノ, \(^▽^)/ — welcoming pose with arms spread wide. Nice to meet you: (*^ω^*)ノ, ( ̄▽ ̄)ノ — fresh greeting for first meetings. These kaomoji are especially used in "meeting contexts" like SNS profiles, self-introductions, and the start of new thread posts. They are also popular as morning greeting kaomoji to accompany "ohayou" or "good morning." In English-speaking communities, the culture of directly attaching kaomoji to the end of sentences like "Hello (^_^)ノ" or "Hi ヾ(^▽^)" has spread.

3. 작별 카오모지 — 이별 장면의 감정 표현

Kaomoji used in farewell scenes have subtly different nuances from greeting types. Bright goodbye: (^_^)/, (・∀・)/ — casual bye-bye. Reluctant farewell: (;∀;)/, (T^T)/ — waving goodbye with teary eyes. Take care/See you: (*^-゜)v, ヽ(^Д^ )ノ — energetically sending someone off. Send-off: (。・ω・。)ノ — gentle farewell. What matters in farewell kaomoji is emotional expression, with eye symbols (tearful ; or T, smiling ^ or ∀) determining the emotion of the parting. Using (^_^)/ for casual friends and (;∀;)/ for precious people brings emotional depth to text communication.

4. 열정적인 손 흔들기 vs 부드러운 손 흔들기 — 강도의 차이 표현

Waving kaomoji can be used differently based on intensity. Large wave/banzai type: \(^▽^)/, ヾ(^▽^)ノ, \(≧▽≦)/ — full-force joy and excitement with both arms raised; suitable for sports watching, celebrations, and grand welcomes. Normal wave: (^_^)ノ, (^▽^)ノ, (・∀・)/ — standard waves easy to use for everyday greetings and farewells. Gentle wave: (。・ω・。)ノ, ( ̄ω ̄)ノ — best for calm, quiet goodbyes or greetings. Small/subtle wave: (ノ∀`)ノ, (・_・)ノ — slightly reserved, a light greeting of barely raising the hand. This differentiation by intensity connects with Japan's honorific system and social awareness, with kaomoji carrying a distinctly Japanese subtlety in text communication.

5. 손 흔드는 카오모지 사용 시점 — SNS·메시지 앱에서의 실천

Effective situations for waving kaomoji: (1) Beginning and end of SNS posts — "Hello (^_^)ノ Today I'm writing about~" and "That's all for today (^_^)/ See you tomorrow!" (2) Joining group chats — ヾ(^▽^*)ノ works naturally as a first post greeting in a thread. (3) After remote work or online meetings — adding (^_^)/ to express thanks or "good work." (4) Returning from a long absence — "Long time no see \(^▽^)/ I'm back." (5) Application in English content — combining kaomoji with English greetings creates a friendly impression. Searched as "wave goodbye kaomoji" and "hello kaomoji" in English-speaking communities, establishing their position as global text communication tools.

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References

This article is written with reference to the sources below. Where primary sources are unclear, the body text explicitly notes "multiple accounts" or "prevailing theory" rather than asserting a single origin.

  1. Wikipedia (en): Kaomoji — 顔文字全般の概説・アーム記号の技法についての記述を含む。
  2. Dresner, E., & Herring, S. C. (2010). Functions of the nonverbal in CMC. Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, 16(1), 249–278. — CMCにおける非言語的絵文字の機能分析(挨拶・感情補完)。
  3. Know Your Meme: Kaomoji — 英語圏でのkaomoji普及・挨拶系顔文字の記録。

Note: Logs of early kaomoji history survive only in fragments; some claims in this area cannot be conclusively verified. This article will be revised as new primary sources surface.

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