🥟 dumpling Emoji — Meaning, Copy & Paste
Quick info
- Unicode
- U+1F95F
- Shortcode
:dumpling:- Category
- Food & Drink
- Subcategory
- asian
- Added in
- Unicode 5.0
- Also known as
- potsticker, gyoza, jiaozi
What Does the dumpling Emoji 🥟 Mean?
A crescent-shaped dumpling with crimped edges on top, browned slightly on the bottom — the dumpling emoji captures the universal Asian-dumpling silhouette that works for Chinese jiaozi, Japanese gyoza, Korean mandu, Nepalese momo, and many more regional variations. Texters use it for Chinese-cuisine content, dim-sum posts, Lunar New Year captions, Asian-cuisine restaurant photos, and family-dumpling-making content. Dumpling-making is a major family tradition during Lunar New Year across Chinese-speaking communities worldwide, and the emoji shows up constantly in those January-February family-cooking posts.
Beyond Lunar New Year, gyoza-night, mandu-recipe, and dim-sum-cart content adopt it heavily. The dumpling emoji has special significance because it was advocated for by dumpling-loving emoji activist Jennifer 8. Lee, whose campaign for a dumpling emoji became a documented case study in how emojis get approved through the Unicode Consortium.
Added to Unicode 10.0 in 2017, the dumpling emoji finally gave a major global cuisine its proper representation on the keyboard.
How to Use 🥟 dumpling Emoji
“Family 🥟-making session for Lunar New Year”
“Dim sum cart at the table 🥟🥟🥟”
Technical Details
| Unicode | U+1F95F |
| HTML Entity | 🥟 |
| CSS Code | \1F95F |
| Shortcode | :dumpling: |
| Keywords | empanada, gyōza, jiaozi, pierogi, potsticker, dumpling |
| Unicode Version | 5.0 |
Frequently Asked Questions
What does 🥟 mean?
It depicts a dumpling and is used for Chinese jiaozi, Japanese gyoza, Korean mandu, and dim sum content.
