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A love heart, broken in two. This emoji represents the aching one feels when they are missing the person they love.
Broken Heart. A love heart, broken in two. This emoji represents the aching one feels when they are missing the person they love. Broken Heart was approved as part of Unicode 6.0 in 2010 and added to Emoji 1.0 in 2015.
A list of all emoji hearts, including every emoji and Unicode character that includes at least one heart. View each heart emoji for more details about cross-platform display or to copy and paste any heart emoji.
All emoji names are official Unicode Character Database or CLDR names. Code points listed are part of the Unicode Standard . Additional emoji descriptions and definitions are copyright © Emojipedia.
Red Heart. A classic red love heart emoji. The red heart ideograph is traditionally used for expressions of love and romance across many cultures, with this being amongst the most frequence use cases for this emoji.
A love heart, broken in two. This emoji represents the aching one feels when they are missing the person they love.
All emoji names are official Unicode Character Database or CLDR names. Code points listed are part of the Unicode Standard . Additional emoji descriptions and definitions are copyright © Emojipedia.
A heart shaded completely black. May be used to express morbidity, sorrow, or a form of dark humor, but despite the color remains most commonly used for love and affection. Black Heart was approved as part of Unicode 9.0 in 2016 and added to Emoji 3.0 in 2016.
The most popular heart emoji on Twitter is ️ Red Heart, followed by 💕 Two Hearts, 💜 Purple Heart and 💙 Blue Heart. This largely matches other publicly available data on hearts. The least popular heart emoji is 🤎 Brown Heart .
A heart with vibration/movement lines above it or around it, indicating it is beating. Displayed in pink or red on most platforms. An early version of this emoji on iOS had the same design as 💖 Sparkling Heart. Beating Heart was approved as part of Unicode 6.0 in 2010 and added to Emoji 1.0 in 2015.