Special Symbols Collection,Kaomoji Copy and Paste | Symbol.blog
Common Symbols(34)
Patterns(299)
Arrows(30)
Math Symbols(35)
Punctuation(27)
Brackets(30)
Currency Symbols(43)
Units(30)
Pinyin(30)
Chinese Characters(50)
Zhuyin(30)
Japanese Characters(30)
Korean Characters(30)
Russian Characters(30)
Greek Letters(49)
Circled Numbers(50)
Numbers(30)
Chinese Strokes(30)
Mahjong(44)
Table Symbols(31)
Stars(30)
Zodiac Signs(30)
Weather Symbols(31)
Recycling Symbols(12)
Date & Time(72)
Superscript & Subscript(37)
How to type symbols
Windows:
- Use Alt codes: Hold Alt + numbers on keypad
- Use Character Map: Start > "Character Map"
- Use Windows Emoji: Win + .
Mac:
- Use Option key: Option + keys
- Use Character Viewer: Ctrl + Command + Space
Copy And Paste Symbols For Real Writing Tasks
This homepage brings together commonly used symbols, math symbols, currency signs, arrows, hearts, punctuation marks, and thousands of Unicode characters in one searchable collection. Instead of checking several keyboards, cheat sheets, or Unicode charts, you can copy the exact symbol you need from a single place.
People usually search for special symbols because they need quick output, but the real task is often bigger: formatting a document, labeling an interface, styling a social profile, building a chart, or editing a product page. That is why this page is designed around fast copying, category browsing, and practical symbol use across different writing contexts.
Use the search bar to find a specific character, browse the category sections below to compare similar options, and review the guidance on this page to choose symbols that stay readable across documents, websites, mobile screens, and shared files.
Homepage FAQ
What can I copy from the Symbol.blog homepage?
You can copy special symbols, Unicode characters, math signs, currency symbols, arrows, punctuation marks, and many other commonly used characters directly from the homepage categories.
Who is this symbol collection useful for?
It is useful for writers, students, designers, marketers, developers, and anyone who needs special characters for documents, websites, spreadsheets, social profiles, or interface labels.
Why use category pages instead of searching random symbols online?
Category pages help you compare related symbols quickly, keep styles consistent, and choose a character that fits your real context instead of copying the first match you find elsewhere.
How do I choose the right symbol for my content?
Start with readability and purpose. A clean symbol is usually best for interfaces, documents, and business copy, while more decorative characters work better in social bios, headings, or visual content.