Nagblɔ ɖase kple dzidzɔ kepkoe dzidzi! Le dzidzi vevie kple Japan Ʋu na Tanabata Ʋu emoji, ɖase kple dzidzɔ na dzɔ.
Gbɔdzidzidzɔ siwo tsetse kple tanabata atiwo mesese kple dzidzɔ beyo gbɔdzidzidzi dzidzikuku mesese gbɔ. Nyatakakoe Tanabata Ʋu emoji la navaɖaɖe eŋu le ƒe Japan festival si de Tanabata fesitava sumɔ ke ɖokui ƒoɖo dzidzidziwo kple tanabata gbɔdzidzikuku mesese gbɔ na wo ƒe ƒe dzidzi. Ne ame aɖeke dea Tanabata Ʋu emoji 🎋 na wò, ene le wo Tanabata ndzɔkpɔ, dzidzɔ dzɔ kple ƒe ɖekakledzidzi.
The 🎋 Tanabata Tree emoji represents the traditional Japanese Tanabata festival and the bamboo tree used to display people's written wishes and dreams.
Klikɛ 🎋 emoji si le dzidzɔ me la, eye wòakpɔ be wòado ɖe wò clipboard. Wòakɔa ɖe anyi - le nsɛm, social media, dokumeŋts, kple anyi aɖe siwo katã tsɔ emojis.
🎋 tanabata ʋu emoji wɔ le Emoji E0.6 eye wòle anyi aɖe siwo katã wɔ - iOS, Android, Windows, kple macOS.
🎋 tanabata ʋu emoji le Nutrɔwo kategoli me, eye wòle Dɔwãwo subkategoli me.
Represents the Japanese Tanabata festival where people write wishes on paper strips and hang them on bamboo. This cultural emoji often confuses non-Japanese users who mistake it for a generic tree.
In Japan, Tanabata celebrates the annual meeting of deities Orihime and Hikoboshi in the Milky Way. People write wishes on colorful paper strips (tanzaku) and hang them on bamboo. The festival occurs on July 7th.
Most users outside Japan mistake this for a generic decorated tree or Christmas tree. It specifically represents the Tanabata festival and the wish-granting bamboo tradition.