Smileys and emotion — Apple-style emoji list
This pillar page gathers the full smileys and emotion group from the Unicode emoji set as shown in Apple’s iOS style. You will find classic yellow faces, hearts, gestures, and composite expressions that people use every day in chat, email, and social posts. The list below links to individual detail pages where you can copy the exact character and see related options in the same category.
What belongs in smileys and emotion
The smileys and emotion category is where most conversational tone lives: laughter, surprise, sarcasm, affection, and sympathy. Unlike stickers or custom images, these are plain Unicode characters, so they render anywhere the platform supports color emoji.
Because many faces look similar at a glance, each iemojis detail page spells out the official name and short description so you can pick the exact nuance you want—for example choosing between slightly smiling, relieved, or upside-down face for dry humor.
Using faces and hearts on Android
Android manufacturers ship different default emoji fonts; iemojis shows Apple-style glyphs so you can match what iPhone users see when you paste into Instagram, WhatsApp, or Slack (depending on how the app renders emoji).
When you copy from iemojis, you place the underlying Unicode code points on the clipboard. That is the same data whether you paste into a note, a browser field, or a messaging client, which makes this flow reliable for support and marketing teams as well as individuals.
Search, clipboard, and editorial depth
Smileys and emotion are where tone lives: a single face can soften feedback, celebrate a win, or signal sarcasm. When you write for mixed iOS and Android audiences, preview Apple-style glyphs here first, then paste so recipients see the same intent even if their system font differs slightly from yours.
When you are unsure which bucket a pictograph belongs to, use the homepage search bar: it scans names and keywords across the entire Apple-style catalog so you do not have to guess whether a symbol lives under this category or another.
If you are preparing several lines for a launch tweet, SMS blast, or patch notes, open the multi-copy clipboard in a second tab. You can enqueue glyphs from different categories (including this one), preview the combined line, then paste once into your destination app.
Finally, remember that assistive technology may read emoji labels differently across OS versions. Pair expressive glyphs with explicit wording for critical instructions, deadlines, or legal notices.
Copy, clipboard, and next steps
On iemojis you can open any glyph on its own detail page to see a larger preview, copy with one tap, and jump to related symbols in the same Apple / iOS-style group. If you need several characters at once, use the multi-copy clipboard from the main navigation.
For step-by-step help with search, categories, and the clipboard basket, read the how-to guide linked below. All pages are designed to work well on Android phones and tablets as well as desktop browsers.
Sample emoji in this category
Each tile links to its own page where you can copy the character and browse related symbols.