🥘

Shallow Pan Of Food

Copy and paste the shallow pan of food symbol 🥘 (U+1F958) instantly. Part of the Supplemental Symbols and Pictographs Unicode block.

Works everywhere: websites, documents, social media, code editors

Character Codes

UnicodeU+1F958
HTML Entity🥘
CSS Code\1F958
JavaScript\u{1F958}
Decimal🥘

About This Symbol

Name
Shallow Pan Of Food
Code Point
U+1F958

The Shallow Pan Of Food (🥘) is a Unicode character assigned to the Supplemental Symbols and Pictographs block at code point U+1F958. This block contains characters used across a variety of applications including technical documentation, web development, mathematical notation, and everyday digital communication. The shallow pan of food symbol can be inserted directly into text or referenced through its HTML entity, CSS code, or JavaScript escape sequence for use in websites and applications.

How to Use

  • 1.Click "Copy Symbol" above to copy 🥘 to your clipboard
  • 2.Paste it anywhere with Ctrl+V (or Cmd+V on Mac)
  • 3.Or use the HTML entity 🥘 in your code
  • 4.For CSS, use \1F958 with the content property

Understanding Shallow Pan Of Food

At code point U+1F958, the shallow pan of food (🥘) occupies a carefully chosen position within the Supplemental Symbols and Pictographs allocation. The Unicode Consortium assigned this character to address the need for a reliable, cross-platform representation of this symbol in electronic documents and interfaces.

The hexadecimal value 1F958 places this character at decimal position 129368 in the Unicode table. In UTF-8, it requires four bytes, which affects storage considerations when this character appears frequently in a document. For web use, the HTML entity 🥘 provides a reliable fallback when direct character insertion is not possible.

Known by its descriptive name referencing "shallow pan," this character serves a specific role that generic symbols cannot fill. It appears in specialized typography, technical standards, and digital content where precision in symbol choice directly affects meaning or layout.

About Emoji & Pictographs

Emoji have transformed digital communication, evolving from a niche feature of Japanese mobile phones into a universal visual language with over 3,600 characters. Unicode's pictograph blocks encode not just the familiar yellow faces but a vast taxonomy of objects, activities, animals, foods, flags, and symbols. ZWJ (Zero Width Joiner) sequences combine existing emoji into compound forms, while skin tone and hair modifiers enable representation across human diversity.

In 1999, Shigetaka Kurita designed 176 12-pixel emoji for NTT DoCoMo's i-mode mobile internet platform, drawing inspiration from manga, kanji, and weather forecast symbols. Competing Japanese carriers created incompatible emoji sets, fragmenting the mobile experience. Google and Apple's push to standardize emoji through Unicode, beginning around 2007 and formalized in Unicode 6.0 (2010), globalized what had been a Japanese phenomenon. The addition of skin tone modifiers in Unicode 8.0 (2015), gender variants, and the ZWJ mechanism for family configurations transformed emoji from simple pictographs into a system capable of representing human identity with increasing nuance.

Common Uses

  • Emotional expression in messaging and social media
  • Brand marketing and advertising campaigns
  • Reaction systems in communication platforms
  • Data visualization and informal surveys
  • Cross-language communication bridging linguistic barriers

Technical Notes: Emoji rendering is platform-dependent — each operating system and application provides its own emoji font with distinct artwork. ZWJ sequences work by joining existing emoji with U+200D: for example, woman + ZWJ + laptop produces a woman technologist on supporting platforms, but falls back to showing both emoji separately on older systems. Flag emoji use pairs of Regional Indicator Symbols rather than dedicated code points, allowing representation of any ISO 3166-1 country code. The emoji presentation selector (U+FE0F) forces emoji rendering for characters that have both text and emoji forms.

Cultural Context: Emoji interpretation varies dramatically across cultures. The folded-hands emoji serves as prayer in some contexts and a high-five in others. The thumbs-up gesture is offensive in parts of the Middle East. The pile-of-poo emoji, far from being frivolous, traces back to a Japanese cultural association between excrement and good luck. The Unicode Consortium's emoji subcommittee now fields hundreds of proposals annually, and decisions about which emoji to encode have become unexpectedly political — debates over the rifle emoji, the hijab emoji, and representation of disabilities reflect real-world social tensions playing out through tiny pictographs.

Related Characters from Supplemental Symbols and Pictographs