leg Emoji
The 𦡠emoji represents a leg and is used to describe movement, body parts, and physical activity.
U+1F9B5
The 𦡠emoji (Unicode U+1F9B5) is a clear way to refer to a leg or the idea of walking and movement. Itβs commonly used in casual messages, captions, and accessibility-friendly UI text when you want a simple body-part reference.
leg Emoji Meaning
𦡠(LEG, U+1F9B5) depicts a leg. Most people use it literally to mention legs, body parts, or fitness-related topics (like walking, running, stretching, and sore legs). It can also be used more informally to suggest movement or to accompany phrases about getting up, going somewhere, or βgetting going.β Depending on the context, it may be used for health and anatomy discussions in a light, emoji-friendly way. Because itβs a body-part symbol, it usually reads best when the surrounding text makes the intent clear.
Common uses
- β’Writing about fitness, legs, or workouts (e.g., stretching or muscle soreness).
- β’Describing movement or walking in messages, posts, and captions.
- β’Indicating a body-part reference in casual health or anatomy notes.
- β’Creating UI labels, icons, or prompts related to βlegβ or βmobility.β
- β’Adding a visual emphasis to phrases about getting up, standing, or moving.
Examples
𦡠Leg Emoji (U+1F9B5)
- π¦΅My legs feel sore todayβtime to stretch π¦΅
- π¦΅Getting some walking in. Step by step π¦΅
- π¦΅Check your form: strong legs help you push off π¦΅
- π¦΅If you have leg pain, consider contacting a professional π¦΅
- π¦΅Iβm up and moving again π¦΅
Variations
Ready to copy
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+1F9B5 | |
| HTML Entity | 🦵 | |
| HTML Code | 🦵 | |
| CSS | \1F9B5 |
FAQ
What is the Unicode for the leg emoji �
The leg emoji 𦡠is Unicode U+1F9B5.
How can I copy the 𦡠emoji?
Copy it directly from this page (π¦΅) and paste it into your app, document, or social post.
Can I use it in HTML or code?
Yes. HTML entity: 🦵. CSS escape: \\1F9B5. JavaScript escape: \\u{1F9B5}.
What does 𦡠usually mean in messages?
It most often refers to the leg/body part or is used to suggest walking, movement, or fitness-related content.