Scroll through your emoji keyboard and you'll find it, tucked between hundreds of smiling faces and coffee cups: a small ear wearing a hearing aid. đĻģ
It's easy to miss. Most people have never used it. But for millions of people who wear hearing aids, that tiny symbol carries surprising weight. It says: you exist in this language too.
A Language Built for What Words Can't Carry
Here's a paradox worth sitting with. Text messaging strips away the very things people with hearing loss are often most attuned to â facial expression, body language, the visual texture of a conversation. When you can't fully rely on your ears, you learn to read faces. And then along comes texting, which has no face at all.
Emoji quietly solved part of that problem for everyone. A bare "okay" can read as cold, annoyed, or perfectly friendly â there's no way to know. "Okay đ" settles the question. Linguists have called emoji the body language of digital speech, and it's an apt description: they restore the emotional layer that plain text amputates.
For people in the hearing loss community, that layer matters even more. Text-based communication isn't just convenient â for many, it's the preferred channel, the place where conversation flows without straining to catch a consonant in a noisy room. A visual vocabulary of tone, layered on top of text, makes that channel genuinely expressive rather than merely functional.
The Update Nobody Noticed â and Everyone Needed
For the first decade of the emoji boom, this visual language had a blind spot: it depicted a world where nobody had a disability. There were rocket ships and unicorns and forty kinds of food, but no wheelchair user, no white cane, no hearing aid.
That changed in 2019, and the push came from an unexpected place. Apple submitted a formal proposal to the Unicode Consortium â the organization that standardizes every character on your keyboard â to add disability-themed emoji. As the company put it in its official announcement, the new characters were meant to fill "a significant gap in the emoji keyboard." That release brought the ear with hearing aid đĻģ, the deaf person emoji đ§ (which depicts the actual sign for "deaf" in sign language), guide dogs, prosthetic limbs, and manual and motorized wheelchairs.
Representation in a keyboard might sound like a small thing. It isn't. Language shapes what feels normal, and for decades the visual language of the internet simply didn't include hearing aids. Now a grandmother can text her grandkids "new upgrade today đĻģâ¨" and the symbol is right there â matter-of-fact, unremarkable, part of the everyday alphabet. That's what real inclusion looks like: not a campaign, just a character.
Finding the Symbols That Speak for You
There's a practical wrinkle, though. With over 3,700 emoji now in existence, the accessibility symbols are needles in a very colorful haystack. Hunting through a phone keyboard's tiny panels is tedious â and on a computer, where many of us do most of our typing, it's even clumsier.
The simplest workaround is a web-based catalog. Browsing the full set of ios emoji in one place lets you see every symbol in Apple's original designs, search by name ("hearing," "ear," "deaf"), and copy any character straight into an email, a text, or a social media post. Because emoji are standardized Unicode characters, whatever you copy works everywhere â in WhatsApp, in a Facebook comment, in a doctor's-office contact form.
A few worth knowing beyond the obvious ones:
The đ§âī¸ and đ§âī¸ variants let you be specific about who you're describing. The đ plain ear works well when talking about hearing checkups. And the humble đ and đ mute/sound icons are surprisingly useful shorthand â "restaurant was đđđ" communicates a hearing aid wearer's evening better than a paragraph could.
A Symbol Is a Start, Not a Finish
Let's be honest about scale: an emoji doesn't improve anyone's hearing. What it improves is visibility â and visibility has a way of compounding. Every casual use of đĻģ in a group chat normalizes hearing aids a little more, the same way emoji with different skin tones and same-sex couples normalized what they depict. Stigma starves in daylight.
So use the symbol. Put it in your bio if you wear hearing aids proudly. Text it to a friend who just got fitted for their first pair. It costs nothing, takes a second, and tells someone that the language of the internet â all 3,700 characters of it â has a place for them.
That little ear earned its spot on the keyboard. It deserves to be used.