Frações ½ ⅓ ⅕ - Símbolos Copiar e Colar | 24+

Copie e cole 24+ símbolos de frações ½¼¾, emojis matemáticos grátis. Perfeitos para receitas e documentos no WhatsApp e Instagram.

Referência de símbolos24

½

Vulgar Fraction One Half Emoji Symbol

Vulgar Fraction One Third Emoji Symbol

Vulgar Fraction One Fifth Emoji Symbol

Vulgar Fraction One Sixth Emoji Symbol

Vulgar Fraction One Eighth Emoji Symbol

Vulgar Fraction Two Thirds Emoji Symbol

Vulgar Fraction Two Fifths Emoji Symbol

Vulgar Fraction Five Sixths Emoji Symbol

Vulgar Fraction Three Eighths Emoji Symbol

¾

Vulgar Fraction Three Quarters Emoji Symbol

Vulgar Fraction Three Fifths Emoji Symbol

Vulgar Fraction Five Eighths Emoji Symbol

Vulgar Fraction Seven Eighths Emoji Symbol

Vulgar Fraction Four Fifths Emoji Symbol

¼

Vulgar Fraction One Quarter Emoji Symbol

Vulgar Fraction One Seventh Emoji Symbol

Vulgar Fraction One Ninth Emoji Symbol

Vulgar Fraction One Tenth Emoji Symbol

Per Mille Sign Emoji Symbol

Per Ten Thousand Sign Emoji Symbol

Vulgar Fraction Zero Thirds Emoji Symbol

%

Percent Sign Emoji Symbol

Care Of Emoji Symbol

Fraction Numerator One Emoji Symbol

📖Symbol Introduction

Copy and paste fraction symbols including ½ ⅓ ⅔ ¼ ¾ ⅛ ⅜ ⅝ ⅞ and more. Click any fraction to copy instantly. Perfect for recipes, measurements, math homework, and technical documents.

💡Pro Tips

  • In recipe content, use Unicode fractions (½ ¼ ¾) instead of slash notation — they render as professional-looking glyphs in all modern apps and look cleaner on mobile screens
  • When scaling recipes, remember that Unicode fraction characters cannot be multiplied in spreadsheets — keep your working data in decimals and display fractions only in the final output
  • For ingredient lists in food blogging, combine the Unicode fraction with the spelled-out unit: '¾ cup' reads faster than 'three-quarters of a cup' in a scanning context
  • In LaTeX papers, never use Unicode fraction characters — always use \frac{}{} or \nicefrac{}{} for typographically correct fractions that resize properly in equations
  • Save a frequently used reference string with all common fractions (½ ⅓ ¼ ¾ ⅛ ⅜ ⅝ ⅞) in a notes app so you can copy the one you need without loading a website
  • For HTML email campaigns, stick to ½ ¼ ¾ from Latin-1 Supplement — these are supported even in Outlook and older email clients, unlike the broader vulgar fractions block
  • When writing math content for social media, ½ and ¼ are universally recognized, but spell out less common fractions like one-third (⅓) with parentheses to avoid reader confusion

🔧How to Use

Methods for inputting symbols on different devices and platforms

🪟How to Type Fraction Symbols on Windows

  • 1
    Click any fraction on this page to copy it to your clipboard instantly
  • 2
    In Microsoft Word, type 1/2, 1/4, or 3/4 and AutoCorrect will convert them to ½, ¼, ¾ automatically
  • 3
    Open Character Map (search 'charmap' in the Start menu) and filter by 'Number Forms' to find all Unicode fractions
  • 4
    Use the emoji panel (Win+. or Win+;) and search 'fraction' or 'half' to find common fraction symbols
  • 5
    For ½, ¼, ¾ specifically: Alt+0189, Alt+0188, Alt+0190 on the numeric keypad (NumLock on)

💡 Tip: The easiest method is to copy symbols directly from this page to your clipboard, then paste them wherever needed.

Frequently Asked Questions - Fraction Symbols Copy And Paste

Click on questions to view detailed answers

½ (U+00BD) is a single Unicode character that displays as a precomposed fraction glyph. 1/2 is three separate characters (digit, slash, digit). Visually, ½ is more compact and professional-looking in prose. Functionally they mean the same thing. Use ½ for clean display in text, and 1/2 in programming or spreadsheet formula contexts where Unicode characters may not be parsed as numbers.

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