Cultural Reverence! Embrace tradition with the Shinto Shrine emoji, a symbol of Japanese spirituality.
A traditional torii gate, representing a Shinto shrine. The Shinto Shrine emoji is commonly used to represent Shintoism, Japanese culture, or places of worship. If someone sends you a ⛩️ emoji, it might mean they are talking about visiting a shrine, appreciating Japanese traditions, or discussing spirituality.
The ⛩️ Shinto Shrine emoji represents the sacred Shinto shrines that are central to Japanese spiritual and cultural traditions. It signifies Japanese spirituality, history, and connection to the natural world.
Klikila ku ⛩️ emoji pamwe oku copy osho ku clipboard yoye. Osho oshi shi paste popepi - ku omail, social media, omadokumenta, nenge ku app oyo yi supporta omaemoji.
⛩️ shinto shrine emoji owa tulwa mu Emoji E0.7 oshi shi supportwa ku omaplatform oma omapi oshili iOS, Android, Windows, nenge macOS.
⛩️ shinto shrine emoji owa mu Travel & Places omupanga, oshi shi shi mu Religious Places omupanga omupi.
The Shinto shrine emoji ⛩️ depicts a torii gate, the iconic vermillion entrance to Shinto shrines. The torii marks the transition from mundane to sacred space. The color represents vitality and protection against evil. There are over 80,000 shrines in Japan.
| Eitopolwa lyaUnicode | Shinto Shrine |
| Eitopolwa lyaApple | Shinto Shrine |
| Yokwa | Kami-no-michi |
| Unicode Hexadicimal | U+26E9 U+FE0F |
| Unicode Pneumatic | U+9961 U+65039 |
| Escape sikatja | \u26e9 \ufe0f |
| Omupanga | 🌉 Travel & Places |
| Omupanga Omupi | ⛪ Religious Places |
| Omapropoza | L2/07-259 |
| Unicode Version | 5.2 | 2009 |
| Emoji Version | 1.0 | 2015 |
| Eitopolwa lyaUnicode | Shinto Shrine |
| Eitopolwa lyaApple | Shinto Shrine |
| Yokwa | Kami-no-michi |
| Unicode Hexadicimal | U+26E9 U+FE0F |
| Unicode Pneumatic | U+9961 U+65039 |
| Escape sikatja | \u26e9 \ufe0f |
| Omupanga | 🌉 Travel & Places |
| Omupanga Omupi | ⛪ Religious Places |
| Omapropoza | L2/07-259 |
| Unicode Version | 5.2 | 2009 |
| Emoji Version | 1.0 | 2015 |