πŸ™†

πŸ™† person gesturing OK Emoji β€” Meaning, Copy & Paste

Quick info

Unicode
U+1F646
Shortcode
:person-gesturing-ok:
Category
People & Body
Subcategory
gestures
Added in
Unicode 0.6
Also known as
OK gesture, all clear, circle arms, yes gesture

What Does the person gesturing OK Emoji πŸ™† Mean?

Forming a big circle with their arms above their head, πŸ™† the person gesturing OK emoji has been signaling all-clear since Unicode 6.0. It shows a person making the Japanese-style 'OK' gesture, where both arms form a large 'O' shape above the head. This is the opposite of πŸ™… β€” instead of 'no,' it means 'yes,' 'OK,' or 'all good.' People use it to signal approval, agreement, or confirmation in a dramatic way.

Common examples include 'Plans are confirmed πŸ™†', 'Everything's fine πŸ™†', or 'I'm good with that πŸ™†.' The gesture has cultural origins in Japan, where it's a clear visual sign of affirmation or acceptance. In Western contexts, it sometimes carries an exaggerated or sarcastic 'OK!' vibe, used playfully when something is over-the-top fine. The emoji also pops up in exercise content because the arm position resembles a stretching pose β€” hence the keyword 'exercise.' Gendered variants πŸ™†β€β™‚οΈ and πŸ™†β€β™€οΈ exist for more specific representation.

Pair it with βœ… for confirmation energy, with πŸ‘Œ for double OK vibes, or with πŸŽ‰ for celebration. Skin tone variants are available. Some users employ it sarcastically, like 'Oh great, another meeting πŸ™†' to imply mock approval.

The emoji works in genuine and ironic contexts equally well. Whether you're confirming plans, signaling all-clear, or just dramatically agreeing with something, this big circle gesture delivers a clear, visible yes.

How to Use πŸ™† person gesturing OK Emoji

“Plans confirmed πŸ™†”
“I'm doing great πŸ™†”
“Sounds good πŸ™†”
Technical Details
UnicodeU+1F646
HTML Entity🙆
CSS Code\1F646
Shortcode:person-gesturing-ok:
Keywordsexercise, gesture, gesturing, hand, ok, omg, person
Unicode Version0.6

Frequently Asked Questions

What does πŸ™† mean?

It depicts a person with arms forming a circle above their head, signaling 'OK,' approval, agreement, or 'all clear' in a culturally Japanese gesture.

Why is πŸ™† considered a Japanese gesture?

The arms-overhead circle is a traditional Japanese way of signaling 'OK' or 'yes,' which is why Unicode included it as a recognizable gesture emoji.