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πŸ™Š

speak-no-evil monkey Emoji

πŸ™Š See-No-Evil Monkey emoji with hands over mouth, used to express secrecy or β€œI didn’t hear/see anything.”

U+1F64A

The πŸ™Š emoji is the β€œsee-no-evil monkey,” part of the well-known three-monkey set. It’s commonly used to suggest silence, secrecy, or politely refusing to acknowledge something.

speak-no-evil monkey Emoji Meaning

πŸ™Š (SPEAK-NO-EVIL MONKEY, U+1F64A) shows a monkey with its hands over its mouth, which is why people often use it to mean β€œI won’t say” or β€œnothing to report.” While it’s often described as β€œsee-no-evil” in the three-monkey set, the visible gesture here is about speaking/saying less. In everyday chats, it can communicate discretion, embarrassment, or a playful refusal to get into details. It may also be used lightly to indicate that you β€œcan’t/won’t comment” on something. Use it when you want to keep things private, avoid gossip, or signal humorous silence.

Skin tones

Common uses

  • β€’To joke about keeping quiet or not revealing a secret
  • β€’To respond to gossip with a playful β€œno comment” reaction
  • β€’To indicate you’re embarrassed and don’t want to explain further
  • β€’To politely avoid discussing sensitive topics in messages
  • β€’To add comedic emphasis when you’re β€œnot saying anything”

Examples

πŸ™Š See-No-Evil Monkey Symbol Copy & Unicode

  • πŸ™ŠMe: β€œSo what happened?” β€” Me: πŸ™Š
  • πŸ™ŠI can’t tell you yet… πŸ™Š
  • πŸ™ŠDid you see that comment? πŸ™Š
  • πŸ™ŠNo details, please πŸ™Š
  • πŸ™ŠLet’s just say it was complicated πŸ™Š

Variations

Ready to copy

Technical codes

UnicodeU+1F64A
HTML Entity🙊
HTML Code🙊
CSS\1F64A

FAQ

What is the Unicode for πŸ™Š?

The Unicode code point for πŸ™Š is U+1F64A.

How do I copy πŸ™Š on my device?

Copy the character directly from this page (πŸ™Š), then paste it into your chat, document, or design tool.

What does πŸ™Š usually mean in messages?

It most often signals silence, secrecy, or β€œno comment,” sometimes in a playful or discreet way.

Can I use πŸ™Š in HTML or JavaScript?

Yes. HTML entity: 🙊. CSS escape: \\1F64A. JavaScript escape: \\u{1F64A}.