speech balloon Emoji
The π¬ speech balloon emoji represents speech, dialogue, and conversation.
U+1F4AC
The π¬ speech balloon is commonly used to indicate talking, messages, or user input. It works well in chat interfaces, captions, and user feedback UI. You can copy it directly or use its Unicode and escape codes in code.
speech balloon Emoji Meaning
The π¬ speech balloon (Unicode name: SPEECH BALLOON, code point U+1F4AC) is most often used to represent spoken words, dialogue, or a message being communicated. Itβs frequently used to label comments, show that someone is βsayingβ something, or add a conversational tone to posts and UI elements like chat bubbles and help tips. Designers often use it alongside text to highlight customer support, announcements, or feedback prompts. In developer contexts, it can be inserted as a Unicode character (U+1F4AC) or via the provided HTML/CSS/JavaScript escape forms.
Common uses
- β’Chat and messaging UI (chat bubbles, message indicators)
- β’Customer support or βleave a commentβ prompts
- β’Social media captions to suggest dialogue or a spoken quote
- β’Text callouts in articles, presentations, or infographics
- β’Feedback and form messaging (e.g., βsend your messageβ)
Examples
π¬ Speech Balloon Emoji
- π¬π¬ Comment with your thoughts below!
- π¬Need help? π¬ Send us a message.
- π¬βThatβs a great idea!β π¬
- π¬We heard youβπ¬ thanks for the feedback.
- π¬Have a question? π¬ Drop it here.
Variations
Ready to copy
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+1F4AC | |
| HTML Entity | 💬 | |
| HTML Code | 💬 | |
| CSS | \1F4AC |
FAQ
What does π¬ mean?
π¬ is a speech balloon symbol used to represent dialogue, talking, messages, or comments.
How do I copy the π¬ symbol?
Copy and paste the character directly: π¬. You can also use its Unicode code point U+1F4AC.
What are the Unicode and escape codes for π¬?
Unicode code point is U+1F4AC. HTML entity is 💬. CSS escape is \\1F4AC. JavaScript escape is \\u{1F4AC}.
Where should I use π¬?
Itβs great for chat interfaces, comment prompts, dialogue-style captions, UI callouts, and customer support or feedback messages.