All emojis
Emojis (from Japanese ็ตตๆๅญ, meaning 'picture character') are Unicode pictographs that can be used in any text, just like regular letters and numbers. They are standardized by the Unicode Consortium and work across all modern operating systems, browsers and applications.
Key features of emojis:
For HTML-encoded special characters like Greek letters (ฮผ), arrows (โ) and quotes (ยซยป), see the HTML character map.
Find emojis by typing keywords like "smile", "heart", "flag" or "animal". Popular searches: arrows • clocks • country flags • fruits • games • phones • hearts • faces or browse random emojis
smiling face with horns
growing heart
teacher: medium-light skin tone
judge
woman with headscarf: medium-light skin tone
man supervillain: medium-dark skin tone
person with white cane facing right: medium skin tone
woman in manual wheelchair facing right: medium-dark skin tone
woman running: medium-dark skin tone
man running facing right: dark skin tone
man lifting weights: medium-dark skin tone
couple with heart: man, man, medium skin tone, light skin tone
family: man, boy, boy
cheese wedge
house with garden
school
airplane
clutch bag
roll of paper
no smoking
Capricorn
fleur-de-lis
diamond with a dot
flag: Niger
Copy and paste: Click on any emoji to see its details, then copy the character or code you need.
In HTML: Use the Unicode codepoint like 😀 or paste the emoji directly.
😀
In URLs: Use the URL-encoded version like %F0%9F%98%80 for query parameters.
%F0%9F%98%80
In domain names: Use punycode encoding for emoji domains (e.g., ๐ฉ.la becomes xn--ls8h.la).