Enter any text and generate it multiple times for quick copy & paste use (WhatsApp, Instagram, etc.)
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No configuration needed — click any button to instantly copy “I miss you” repeat text to your clipboard. Copy and paste 100 to 1000 times
Express how much you miss someone with emotional emoji-style text presets.
Show deep emotions and longing with heartfelt repeated messages.
Perfect for expressing sadness and emotional distance.
For those late nights when you can't stop thinking about someone.
Daily emotions of missing someone special.
Simple yet powerful way to express your feelings.
Continuous feeling of missing someone special.
For intense emotions and deep attachment.
Missing someone and not knowing what to say is one of the most universal feelings in the world. One "I miss you" gets read, gets a heart react, and disappears. A hundred of them? That's harder to scroll past without actually feeling something. Use this tool to generate I miss you 100 times copy and paste — with their name, with emojis, and ready to paste into WhatsApp, Telegram, or Instagram in one click. No typing. No repeating yourself manually. Just pick your count, hit generate, and send.
If the copy button doesn't respond, tap Select All then press Ctrl+C on Windows or Cmd+C on Mac.
Missing someone is already a heavy feeling. Sending it once doesn't come close to the weight of it. I miss you 100 times copy and paste with emojis turns that feeling into something visible — a hundred lines of "I miss you 💙" filling someone's screen is the kind of message that makes them stop, sit with it, and actually feel missed.
Plain text works. But emojis make the message breathe. They add warmth to what would otherwise be a solid wall of identical lines, and they change how the other person reads each one — not as spam, but as feeling stacked on top of feeling. People screenshot these. They look back at them on difficult days. They send them to other people because they don't quite know how to react to being missed that loudly.
Best emojis for missing someone:
WhatsApp is where most of these conversations happen — and it's built for it. Generate your message, copy it, open the chat, long-press the message field, tap Paste, and send. WhatsApp won't split or truncate it, even at high counts. Your I miss you arrives as one complete flood, exactly as intended.
On the receiving end, here's what each count actually feels like:
Some distances are bigger than a hundred lines can cover. I miss you 1000 times copy and paste is for the long-distance relationships, the people who moved away, the ones you talked to every day and now only see on a screen. A thousand lines of "I miss you" doesn't fix the distance — but it closes it, just for a moment, in a way that one text never could.
It's over the top. It's meant to be. That's the whole point. 🥺
Type "I miss you so much [name] 💙" into the tool, choose 1000, generate, and paste. The whole process takes under a minute. The feeling it sends takes considerably longer to fade.
Jaan means "my life" in Urdu and Hindi — and there's no word that carries more weight in a romantic relationship. "I miss you Jaan 💙" repeated 500 times on WhatsApp is a love letter and a declaration in one. It doesn't need explanation. It doesn't need context. It just lands.
Long-distance relationships run on exactly this kind of message. When physical presence isn't possible, words have to carry more weight than they're built for. A thousand repeated I miss yous fills that gap in a way that one carefully crafted paragraph rarely manages — because it feels relentless in the same way that missing someone actually is.
When a sibling moves cities for college or work, the distance hits differently than you expect. "I miss you Didi 🥺" or "I miss you Bhai 💙" repeated 100 times is the kind of message that gets a voice note back instead of a text — because it actually lands. Type your version into the tool and let the count speak for itself.
Missing your parents is one of those feelings that builds slowly and then hits all at once. "I miss you Maa ❤️" or "I miss you Papa 💙" repeated even 100 times is something they'll show the rest of the family. It's unexpected, it's warm, and it makes them feel genuinely remembered — not just on birthdays and holidays, but on a random evening when the distance suddenly felt real.
Best friends who drift to different cities don't always say it, but they feel it. "I miss you Yaar 💙" repeated 500 times is both chaotic and genuinely touching — which is exactly the right combination for a best friend. They'll laugh, they'll send it to the group chat, and somewhere underneath all of that they'll actually feel it. That's the goal.
Missing someone is relentless. It doesn't send itself once and stop. It comes back in quiet moments — when you hear a song, when something funny happens and they're the first person you want to tell, when you wake up and the first thought you have is of them. One "I miss you" text doesn't capture any of that. A hundred might come closer.
There's also something disarming about receiving a message like this. It breaks the normal rhythm of a conversation. It surprises people. It makes them feel the weight of being missed rather than just reading a word about it. And because it's unexpected, it feels more genuine — not more performative — even though it took thirty seconds to generate.
People keep these messages. They screenshot them. They look back at them on days when they need to feel connected to someone. That's not something a single well-worded text usually manages. 💙
Distance is hard. Some people are better at saying it than others. Some people feel it deeply and don't know how to make the other person understand exactly how much they're missed — not in a way that matches the feeling.
This tool exists for that gap.
Whether you go with 100 times for someone you haven't seen in a while, 1000 times for the person who lives in a different city now, or all the way to 10,000 for the one person who already knows — the message underneath all of it is the same.
You thought of them. You didn't just keep it to yourself. And sometimes, making sure someone actually knows they're missed is the most important thing you can do. 💙