Emoji & Symbol Copy Paste
3,000+ emojis, arrows, symbols and special characters. Click to copy, paste anywhere.
All Categories
370+ arrow symbols ← → ↑ ↓ ⇒ ➤
당구장 기호, daggers, asterisks
Heart emojis & love symbols ♡ ❤
Stars, sparkles ★ ☆ ✨ ✦
All face emojis 😂 🥰 😎 🤔
Hands & gestures 👍 ✌️ 👏 🤝
Ticks, crosses ✓ ✔ ✗ ✘ ☑
Cards, zodiac, chess ♠ ♈ ♛
Math, Greek letters ± ÷ × π Σ
Money signs $ € £ ¥ ₿ ₩
All bracket types 「」 《》 【】
Circled, roman ① ❶ Ⅰ ⒈
Circle shapes ● ○ ◉ ◎ ⊙
Square shapes ■ □ ▪ ◼ 🟥
Triangle shapes ▲ △ ▶ ◆ 🔷
Lines, borders ─ │ ═ ║ ┌ ┘
Music notes ♩ ♪ ♫ ♬ 🎵
Flowers, plants ✿ ❀ 🌸 🌹
Weather, sky ☀ ☁ ❄ 🌈 🌊
Animal emojis 🐶 🐱 🐸 🦊
Food emojis 🍔 🍕 🍣 ☕
Travel, transport ✈️ 🚗 🌍
Text faces ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ (◕‿◕)
Most Popular — Quick Copy
About EmojiCopy
EmojiCopy is the fastest and most complete emoji and symbol copy-paste tool on the web. With 3,000+ items across 23 categories, you can find any emoji, arrow, special character, or text symbol you need. Every symbol is standard Unicode, meaning it works on every device, browser, and platform — from Instagram and Twitter to Google Docs and email.
Popular categories include our massive arrow collection (370+ symbols including ← → ↑ ↓ ⇐ ⇒ ➤), the ※ reference marks page (당구장 기호 and more), hearts (❤️ ♡ 💕), stars (★ ⭐ ✨), and smiley faces (😀 😂 🥰). We also offer math symbols, currency signs, box drawing characters, music notes, brackets, and kaomoji text faces.
How do I copy an emoji?
Click on any emoji or symbol and it gets copied automatically. Then paste with Ctrl+V (Windows) or Cmd+V (Mac). It works in any text field.
Do these work on all platforms?
Yes — Instagram, Twitter/X, Facebook, TikTok, WhatsApp, Discord, Slack, Gmail, Google Docs, Microsoft Word, and everywhere else that supports text.
What is the ※ (reference mark) symbol?
The ※ symbol is called "당구장 기호" in Korean and "kome" in Japanese. It marks footnotes and special notes. Visit our dedicated Reference Marks page for 200+ similar symbols.
How many arrows do you have?
Over 370 arrow symbols — basic (←→↑↓), double (⇐⇒⇔), heavy (➤➜➡), harpoon, supplemental, and many more. The most comprehensive arrow collection online.
Complete Guide
What Are Emojis and How Do They Work?
Emojis are digital pictographs standardized by the Unicode Consortium, an international organization that maintains text encoding standards. Each emoji has a unique Unicode code point — for example, the smiling face 😊 is U+1F60A. When you copy an emoji from our tool, you're copying this Unicode character, which is then rendered by the receiving device's operating system into its platform-specific visual style.
The History and Evolution of Emojis
The first emoji set was created in 1999 by Shigetaka Kurita for the Japanese mobile carrier NTT DoCoMo. The original set contained just 176 12×12 pixel icons. In 2010, Unicode 6.0 officially incorporated 722 emojis, enabling cross-platform compatibility. As of Unicode 15.1 (2023), there are over 3,600 emojis including skin tone modifiers, gender variants, and flag sequences. New emojis are proposed and approved annually through the Unicode Consortium's review process.
How Emojis Display Differently Across Platforms
The same Unicode emoji can look quite different on Apple, Google, Samsung, Microsoft, and other platforms. Each company designs their own emoji artwork while following Unicode's general description. For example, the "pistol" emoji (🔫) was changed from a realistic firearm to a water gun across all major platforms between 2016-2018. Our tool displays emojis in your browser's default style, but they may look different when pasted into other apps.
Using Emojis Effectively in Communication
Research from the University of Cambridge found that emoji use in digital communication increases perceived warmth and emotional connection. In marketing, emails with emojis in subject lines see 56% higher open rates. However, overuse or inappropriate emoji placement can reduce perceived professionalism. Best practices include using emojis to complement rather than replace text, being mindful of cultural differences in emoji interpretation, and limiting emoji use in formal contexts.
Emoji Accessibility and Inclusion
The Unicode Consortium has made significant efforts toward emoji inclusivity. Skin tone modifiers (introduced in 2015) allow users to select from five skin tones plus the default yellow. Gender-neutral emoji options were added in 2019. Disability-related emojis (wheelchair, prosthetic limbs, hearing aids) were introduced in 2019. Mixed skin-tone couple emojis were added in 2021. These additions reflect the ongoing effort to make emoji communication more representative and inclusive.