Toothy grins, bared fangs, and dental text faces

Teeth Kaomoji

Copy teeth kaomoji, bared-tooth and fanged Japanese text faces for grins, snarls, and dental-themed messages on Discord, Instagram, TikTok, and texts.

Showing 186 teeth kaomoji text faces.

Teeth Kaomoji copy and paste

182 text faces shown in All.

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Teeth Kaomoji ASCII art

Multi-line text art. Paste into a monospace field so the alignment survives.

4 pieces
teeth ascii art4×15

Playful snarls in chat

A sharp-toothed face like ▼皿▼ or (・ш・) reads as a joking growl or mock-threat, good for teasing a friend without sounding genuinely angry.

Dental appointment reminders

Pair a toothbrush combo like 🦷🪥✨ with a calendar note or group chat reminder to make a routine errand feel less dry.

Halloween and fang aesthetics

Fanged faces and skull-and-bone emoji combos fit vampire, monster, or spooky-season bios and captions without needing a full costume photo.

Storytelling captions

The book-and-quill combos like 📖✍️ work as a small icon marking a caption, thread, or bio section as narrative or fantasy-themed.

How to use teeth kaomoji

Discord message or reply

  • A sharp grin like ▼皿▼ lands as a playful reaction to a bold or dramatic message.
  • Save the flatter, dash-eyed faces for deadpan or sarcastic replies.

Dentist or dental care caption

  • Pair a plain tooth-and-brush combo with the actual appointment time or reminder text.
  • Keep the combo short so it reads as an icon, not the main message.

Halloween or vampire bio

  • Combine a fanged face with a bone or skull emoji for a fuller spooky-season look.
  • A single bone accent works well as a quiet seasonal touch without overloading the bio.

Texting a friend

  • A shy grin like (ノш`) softens a joke or a slightly embarrassing admission.
  • Match the intensity of the face to the message — save the boldest grins for genuinely exciting news.

Teeth Kaomoji message templates

Copy a whole message for chats, captions, and comments.

Teeth Kaomoji meanings

(◉ϖ◉)

A wide-eyed face with a small round mouth. It reads as startled curiosity rather than aggression, useful as a soft reaction to something odd.

▼皿▼

A bold triangular grin baring a full row of teeth. It plays as an exaggerated, cartoonish threat or excitement rather than real anger — think a villain's grin, not a genuine warning.

(・ш・)

A small ш-shaped mouth that reads as a content, closed-lip smile with a hint of teeth. Softer than the triangular grins, it fits everyday cheerful messages.

(-皿-)

Flat dash eyes paired with the bared-teeth mouth signal deadpan irritation, the kind of face you send when something is mildly ridiculous rather than upsetting.

(ノш`)

A shy, teeth-baring smile with the stroke suggesting a hand near the face. It reads as bashful amusement, like stifling a laugh rather than a full grin.

>ᵥ_ᵥ<

Narrow closed eyes over a small mouth shape give an unimpressed, sulky look. It works well as a wordless reply to something annoying but not worth a real complaint.

(꒪ш꒪)

Round surprised eyes over the ш mouth combine shock with a toothy grin, a good fit for good news that catches you off guard.

(・廿・)

A minimalist face using a flat mouth glyph in place of a smile. It reads as a plain, low-energy grin — useful when you want a face without much emotional weight.

ʚ🦷ɞ

A single tooth emoji framed by soft wing brackets, a decorative rather than expressive combo. It suits a bio line or caption about dental care or a dentist-themed account.

😬🪥

The grimacing face paired with a toothbrush reads literally as 'time to brush' — a light, slightly reluctant nudge rather than genuine distress.

(。>ш<)

Squeezed-shut eyes over the teeth mouth suggest an exaggerated, delighted grin, the kind of reaction you'd send after eating something great.

(#`ш´)

The hash mark before the eyes is kaomoji shorthand for an anger vein, so this reads as mock outrage layered over a toothy expression — comic frustration, not real hostility.

🦷🪥

The plainest possible tooth-and-brush pairing. Use it as a quick visual shorthand for dental care in a caption or reminder without needing a sentence.

🩻

A single X-ray emoji, useful on its own as a medical or dental-appointment marker, or combined with other anatomy emoji for a clinical-themed combo.

🦴🦴🦴

A repeated bone emoji works as a simple skeletal or Halloween accent, distinct from the tooth-specific combos and better suited to broader spooky or anatomy themes.

Related kaomoji clusters

Planned clusters become real internal links after each English page is published.

Teeth Kaomoji — background

Japanese kaomoji are read upright, left to right, unlike Western emoticons like :) which are read sideways — that's why the eyes sit above the mouth instead of to its side.

Rendering support for rare symbols depends on the font a device ships with, which is why the same string can look complete on one phone and show blank boxes on another.

The spread of a popular kaomoji across chat platforms is largely copy-paste driven — one widely shared combination gets picked up and remixed by other users.

The Cyrillic letter ш and the Chinese character 皿 are both borrowed purely for their shape in teeth kaomoji — a row of vertical strokes or a boxy grid that reads as a bared row of teeth, with no connection to their original language.

Teeth-baring kaomoji sit at the more intense end of the kaomoji emotional range, closer to shock, aggression, or an exaggerated grin than the closed-mouth calm of a basic smiley.

What is teeth kaomoji?

Teeth kaomoji are Japanese text faces and emoji combos that show a bared, gritted, or grinning mouth full of teeth, built from punctuation, Cyrillic-look-alike glyphs like ш and 皿, and tooth-related emoji such as 🦷 and 🪥.

How do I copy and paste a teeth kaomoji?

Tap or click any face on this page to copy it to your clipboard, then paste it into a chat, bio, caption, or document like any other text.

Why do teeth kaomoji use characters like ш and 皿?

Those glyphs are borrowed from Cyrillic and Chinese respectively for their shape, not their meaning. ш's three vertical strokes and 皿's boxy grid both resemble a row of teeth well enough to stand in for a bared-mouth expression.

What's the difference between a sharp teeth kaomoji and a regular smiley?

A regular smiley like (^_^) implies a closed, pleasant expression. A teeth kaomoji like ▼皿▼ or (・ш・) explicitly shows the mouth open with teeth visible, which reads as more intense — playful aggression, a big grin, or mock anger rather than a quiet smile.

Are teeth kaomoji always angry or aggressive?

No. Many, like (・ш・) or (。>ш<), read as cheerful or delighted rather than hostile. Context and the surrounding eyes decide the tone — flat dash eyes lean irritated, while curved or squeezed-shut eyes lean happy.

Can I use teeth kaomoji for dentist or dental care posts?

Yes. The tooth-and-toothbrush combos like 🦷🪥✨ and single tooth emoji accents like ʚ🦷ɞ work well for dental appointment reminders, oral hygiene captions, or a dentist's own social bio.

Do teeth kaomoji work for Halloween or vampire themes?

Yes. The sharp, fanged faces and skull-and-bone emoji combos in the Medical & Anatomy and Photo Art groups fit spooky-season captions and vampire or monster bios without needing a costume photo.

Will teeth kaomoji display correctly on every device?

Most render fine in modern browsers and messaging apps since they use standard Unicode characters, but older devices or apps with limited font support may show a blank box for rarer glyphs or emoji.

What's a good teeth kaomoji for a playful threat or tease?

▼皿▼ and (#`ш´) both read as exaggerated, cartoonish menace — bold enough to land as a joke rather than genuine anger, which makes them good for teasing a friend.