Emoji Family

People with bunny ears emoji SVG

Two people dressed in bunny ears and leotards, posing side by side. Often used to represent friendship, fun, or a β€œlet’s party” sentiment. This emoji predates the inclusion of emojis within Unicode. It was first added to early Japanese emoji keyboards by Softbank in 2000. This emoji was originally intended to depict a stylized β€œBunny Girl,” an iteration of the Playboy Bunny concept popular in Japan. Typically portrayed as an attractive woman wearing bunny ears and a leotard, a bunny girl can also be seen in anime as a hybrid human/animal known as a Kemonomimi. Before major platforms began implementing gender-neutral designs as the default for people emojis in the late 2010s, most vendors depicted this emoji as two women, consistent with its original Unicode name, Women with Bunny Ears. This remained the case even after gender-specific versions were introduced in 2016; although the base emoji was renamed to be non-gender-specific, it continued to share its design with πŸ‘―β€β™€οΈ Women with Bunny Ears emoji for several years across most emoji sets. While the original Softbank version contained two people, another early Japanese emoji design by KDDI featured a single individual wearing bunny ears, as did early designs from Google, Samsung, Microsoft, and Facebook

Description from Emojipedia

What does the people with bunny ears emoji mean?

The people with bunny ears emoji is often used to represent fun, celebrations, or innocence, like at costume parties or Easter events.

The above meaning was generated by artificial intelligence. It may contain errors or inaccuracies, or be entirely untrue.
People with bunny ears emoji from the Noto emoji pack

Copy the people with bunny ears emoji

Copy and paste the πŸ‘― people with bunny ears emoji to your clipboard.


Download the people with bunny ears emoji

Download the people with bunny ears emoji in PNG and SVG formats below, or copy the emoji to your clipboard.


Use this emoji in your website

You can add the people with bunny ears emoji to your website in a few ways. The first way is by using the unicode character, the emoji itself. This has the advantage of rendering immediately and it doesn't require any additional network requests. However, emoji characters don't always scale well and they are inconsistent across platforms.

<p>Here is my emoji: πŸ‘―</p>

The second way is by using the emoji's HTML character reference, which has the same advantages and disadvantages of using the emoji itself.

<p>Here is my emoji: &#x1f46f;</p>

The third way is by using an image to display the emoji. This works great if you want to display larger emojis, for example, to allow users to "react" to an article. We provide an Emoji API which you can use to display high-quality SVG or PNG emoji images on your website.

<p>Here is my emoji: <img src="https://www.emoji.family/api/emojis/1f46f/noto/svg" alt="" style="width: 1.2em; height: 1.2em;" /></p>

Variations of the people with bunny ears emoji

Similar emojis