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🥫
U+1F96B · Canned Food · Supplemental Symbols and Pictographs · Common

Canned Food 🥫

Usage snapshot:

  • Used in content written with the Common script; suitable for UI labels and body text.
  • Appears in the Unicode block Supplemental Symbols and Pictographs.

History & usage: This emoji shows canned food. The name contains two content tokens that read as a noun phrase and help users recognize the concept rather than a sound unit, with no extra qualifiers in the token stream. In general use, tokens of this kind guide how labels and icons group items in menus, catalogs, and educational materials. Practical contexts include: in emoji dictionaries and primers that map everyday objects, in archival transcriptions of modern product packaging or recipe notes, and in typographic specimens that study pictorial symbols in contemporary communication. If a cultural capsule exists, a single sentence from it would appear here; otherwise, the item remains described in general terms for broad reference. Cross‑platform appearance is usually stable, and accessibility users can rely on alt text for screen readers.

See our category page for related symbols.

Need styled alternatives? Try the Fancy Text tool.

Technical details
  • Codepoint: U+1F96B
  • General Category: So
  • Age: 10.0
  • Bidi Class: ON
  • Block: Supplemental Symbols and Pictographs
  • Script: Common
  • UTF-8: F0 9F A5 AB
  • UTF-16: D83E DD6B
  • UTF-32: 0001F96B
  • HTML dec: 🥫
  • HTML hex: 🥫
  • JS escape: \u{1F96B}
  • Python \N{}: \N{CANNED FOOD}
  • Python \U: \U0001F96B
  • URL-encoded: %F0%9F%A5%AB
  • CSS escape: \1F96B
How to type / insert

Fast copy: click the Copy button near the top of this page.

By codepoint: in many editors and IDEs, you can insert via the Unicode code U+1F96B or a built‑in character picker.

HTML: use the numeric entity 🥫 (hex) or 🥫 (decimal) when an HTML entity is needed.

Compatibility & troubleshooting

Font support: if the symbol does not render, the current font likely lacks this codepoint. Choose a font with broad Unicode coverage or allow a fallback font.

Web pages: ensure your CSS font stack includes a general fallback; avoid relying on images for common symbols to preserve accessibility and copyability.