Kaomoji na Kokopyahin at Ipe-paste

962 kaomoji across 70 groups. Copy, paste, and use text-based faces like ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ anywhere Unicode emojis feel too cartoony.

Mga sikat na piling kaomoji

Positibong Damdamin Kaomoji

89 kaomoji · 7 mga grupo

Masaya, mapagmahal, cute at maalaga na mga kaomoji mood. 😊

Negatibong Emosyon Kaomoji

124 kaomoji · 9 mga grupo

Galit, malungkot, natatakot at naiinis na kaomoji moods.

Neutral na Emosyon Kaomoji

96 kaomoji · 7 mga grupo

Nalilito, nagdududa, nagulat at deadpan na kaomoji. 😊

Mga Aksyon Kaomoji

209 kaomoji · 15 mga grupo

Kaomoji na nagpapakita ng galaw — pagbati, yakap, pagtakbo, pagtulog, at iba pa.

Mga Hayop Kaomoji

156 kaomoji · 13 mga grupo

Critter-shaped kaomoji — pusa, oso, aso, kuneho, ibon at mga kaibigan.

Iba pa Kaomoji

288 kaomoji · 19 mga grupo

Special na kaomoji — mga simbolo, kumikislap, pagkain, musika, mahika at iba pa.

Ano ang kaomoji?

Kaomoji (顔文字) — literally "face characters" in Japanese — are emoticons built from Unicode letters, punctuation, brackets and diacritics. Unlike the colourful bitmap emojis on your phone keyboard, a kaomoji is just plain text: the entire face exists between the opening and closing bracket, and every pair of eyes, mouth, blush mark or sweat drop is a real character anyone can copy, paste or type. That is why kaomoji feel so legible across every chat app, forum, game, code comment and terminal — the medium does not need emoji fonts or colour.

Classic Western ASCII emoticons (like :-) or ;-) ) are read sideways; kaomoji are read upright. A face such as (ᵔ◡ᵔ) already shows two eyes and a smile without rotating your head, which is why they spread so quickly from Japanese bulletin boards into chat rooms, Twitter, Discord and Twitch.

Maikling kasaysayan ng kaomoji

Ang unang malawakang kinikilalang kaomoji ay (^_^), attributed to a 1986 post by Yasushi Wakabayashi on the Japanese bulletin board ASCII NET. Western users at the same time were happily typing :) sideways — but Japanese keyboards, and Japanese multi-byte encodings like Shift-JIS, gave users an enormous palette of full-width brackets, kana and symbols. Over the late 1980s and early 1990s, Japanese forum culture (2channel and its descendants especially) turned this palette into a folk art: thousands of face variations, each with a subtly different emotion.

Noong huling bahagi ng 1990s, ang table-flip (╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻ at ang shrug ¯\\_(ツ)_/¯ had crossed into English-language internet culture. The shrug in particular became so iconic that it was featured as a reaction on Slack, Discord, macOS text replacement and countless meme templates. Today kaomoji coexist with Unicode emojis, but they fill a different niche — ironic, text-first, sometimes ASCII-pure, sometimes absurdly elaborate.

Kaomoji vs. emoji vs. emoticon

All three are "pictographic communication", but only emoji require an emoji-aware font. Kaomoji work everywhere text works — including places emoji notoriously break, like terminals, old web forms, LaTeX documents, git commit messages and monospaced code editors.

Paano ginagawa ang kaomoji

Karamihan sa kaomoji ay sumusunod sa simpleng pattern: [left bracket][left cheek/hand][left eye][mouth][right eye][right cheek/hand][right bracket]. Swapping a single component changes the emotion dramatically — the same brackets plus different eyes gives you happy, crying, angry, sleepy or confused. That modularity is exactly why there are so many variations, and why kaomoji lend themselves to being browsed by mood, action or character type.

Mga karaniwang building blocks

Once you know these parts, you can read any kaomoji at a glance and even remix your own. That is the real reward of browsing a kaomoji library: you stop copying and start composing.

Bakit gumagamit pa rin ng kaomoji ang mga tao sa 2026

Paano gumamit ng kaomoji — mabilisang gabay

  1. Click any kaomoji on this site to copy it to your clipboard — no sign-up, no app.
  2. Paste it anywhere that accepts text: Slack, Discord, Twitter/X, Instagram captions, WhatsApp, Telegram, SMS, email, Notion, Figma, Obsidian, a Twitch chat, a commit message, even a <code>&lt;title&gt;</code> tag.
  3. On mobile, long-press the copied text to paste — some apps need a second tap to flatten formatting.
  4. In macOS, add your favourites to System Settings → Keyboard → Text Replacements (e.g. "shr" → ¯\_(ツ)_/¯). Windows users can use PowerToys Keyboard Manager or AutoHotKey.
  5. Avoid double-escaping: if a chat app converts smart quotes or backslashes, the kaomoji can break. Pasting into a code fence (wrap with `backticks`) usually preserves it.

Mga kategorya ng kaomoji sa site na ito

We group 962 kaomoji into six top-level families so you can find the right face fast:

Every kaomoji has its own page with copy-paste, a description, related keywords, and a grid of similar kaomoji from the same group, so discovery keeps going.

Mga sikat na kaomoji na malamang alam mo na

Kaomoji sa iba't ibang platform

Kaomoji are just Unicode text, so they work everywhere plain text works. A few platform notes:

Kultura, komunidad at kaomoji lore

Kaomoji are a living part of internet folk culture. On the Japanese side: 2channel's ASCII-art boards, Nico Nico Douga comment streams, and the enormous kaomoji dictionaries hosted on personal homepages in the late 2000s. On the Western side: early LiveJournal + DeviantArt communities, the 2010s Tumblr cutesy era, MMO guild chats where kaomoji served as quick emotional reactions, and more recently the vtuber scene, where kaomoji pair naturally with the anime-coded communication style.

Interestingly, some kaomoji have travelled in the other direction: the shrug ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ was popularised in English and is now often found in Japanese chat too. Kaomoji are a two-way bridge between cultures.

FAQ ng Kaomoji

Pareho ba ang kaomoji sa emoji?

No. Emoji are single picture characters encoded in the Unicode standard and rendered with colour fonts. Kaomoji are faces built out of several plain text characters — punctuation, brackets, kana, diacritics. Kaomoji do not require an emoji-aware font.

Paano ko kokopyahin ang kaomoji sa mobile?

Tap any kaomoji on this site; it is copied to your clipboard automatically. Then long-press in the target app and choose "Paste". Most kaomoji are short enough that a single tap is all it takes.

Bakit mukhang kakaiba / boxy ang kaomoji ko sa ilang apps?

The app is missing a glyph. Usually this is the Japanese kana (ツ, ω) or a less-common bracket. Updating the OS or switching to a Noto / Arial Unicode MS font fixes almost every case.

Pwede ba akong gumamit ng kaomoji sa Twitter / X nang hindi nasisira ang character count ko?Pwede ba akong gumamit ng kaomoji sa Twitter / X nang hindi nasisira ang character count ko?

Yes. Each Unicode code point counts as one character for Twitter. Combining diacritics are still individual characters, so an elaborate multi-layer kaomoji can eat 20+ characters; classic kaomoji are usually 5–12.

Accessible ba ang kaomoji para sa screen readers?

Screen readers announce each code point, which makes kaomoji verbose but readable. For maximum accessibility, always pair a decorative kaomoji with a short written sentence describing the emotion.

Pwede ba akong gumawa ng sarili kong kaomoji?

Absolutely — kaomoji are open-source by nature. Pick eyes, a mouth, brackets, and optional hands or effects, and assemble. If you want your creation on this site, drop it in a commit message or share it with us.

Ano ang escape sequence ng shrug kaomoji?

Ang canonical shrug ay ¯\\_(ツ)_/¯. Kapag isinusulat ito sa code o Markdown file, i-escape ang mga backslash: ¯\\\\_(ツ)_/¯. Karamihan sa chat apps ay tama ang pag-handle ng single-backslash version.

Plural ba ito ng "kaomoji" o "kaomojis"?

Both are used in English. Purists follow Japanese (no plural -s: "ten kaomoji"), but "kaomojis" is widely understood.

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