🙆

🙆 person gesturing OK Emoji — Meaning, Copy & Paste

Informations rapides

Unicode
U+1F646
Code court
:person-gesturing-ok:
Catégorie
People & Body
Sous-catégorie
gestures
Ajouté dans
Unicode 0.6
Aussi connu sous le nom de
OK gesture, all clear, circle arms, yes gesture

What Does the person gesturing OK Emoji 🙆 Mean?

Forming a big circle with their arms above their head, 🙆 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 🙅 — 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 🙆', 'Everything's fine 🙆', or 'I'm good with that 🙆.' 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 — hence the keyword 'exercise.' Gendered variants 🙆‍♂️ and 🙆‍♀️ exist for more specific representation.

Pair it with ✅ for confirmation energy, with 👌 for double OK vibes, or with 🎉 for celebration. Skin tone variants are available. Some users employ it sarcastically, like 'Oh great, another meeting 🙆' 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 🙆 person gesturing OK Emoji

“Plans confirmed 🙆”
“I'm doing great 🙆”
“Sounds good 🙆”
Détails techniques
UnicodeU+1F646
Entité HTML🙆
Code CSS\1F646
Code court:person-gesturing-ok:
Mots clésexercise, gesture, gesturing, hand, ok, omg, person
Version Unicode0.6

Questions fréquemment posées

What does 🙆 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 🙆 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.