Mpɛn a Wɔatɔ Mu Mpɛn a wɔatɔ mu botɔn.
Mpɛn a wɔatɔ mu emoji no da kan wɔ mpɛn a ɛyɛ fitaa ne fitaa mu a wɔatɔ wɔn mu. Saa botɔn yi di akɔnnɔ ahoɔyɛ anaa mpɛn a ɛfiri aman pɛyɛ. Sɛ ɛyɛ ɔbarima a ɔsɔ mpɛn a wɔatɔ mu emoji, ɔrebɛka ahoɔyɛ anaa aman kɔm.
The 🎌 Crossed Flags emoji represents or means the crossed flags of Japan, often used to signify Japanese culture, celebrations, or festivals.
Pɛpɛɛpɛ, klik wɔ 🎌 emoji no a ɛda so no na ɛbɛkɔpim ntɛm kɔ w'clipboard mu. Afei wubetumi de asɔ baabiara – wɔ asɛm, social media, krataa, anaa app biara a gye emojis tom.
🎌 mpɛn a wɔatɔ mu emoji no hyɛɛ mu wɔ Emoji E0.6 na seesei ɛwɔ so wɔ platform nyinaa a ɛkɛse te sɛ iOS, Android, Windows, ne macOS.
🎌 mpɛn a wɔatɔ mu emoji no wɔ Frankaa kategori no mu, na ɛda Fɛnhyia subkategori no mu pɛpɛɛpɛ.
The crossed flags emoji displays two Japanese flags (Hinomaru) crossed over each other. This design originates from Japanese mobile carriers and represents celebration, national events, or sports occasions in Japan. It was included in Unicode from Japanese emoji sets.
In Japan, crossed flags often appear during national holidays, sports events, and celebrations. Internationally, it's commonly used for any celebratory or festive occasion, diplomatic events, or international sports competitions regardless of country.
| Unicode Din | Crossed Flags |
| Apam Foforo Din | Crossed Flags |
| Sɛ Ɔyare Yɛ | Two Flags |
| Unicode Hexadecimal | U+1F38C |
| Unicode Desimɛl | U+127884 |
| Ɛskeip Sikwens | \u1f38c |
| Kurom | 🏴☠️ Frankaa |
| Anommuo | 🚩 Fɛnhyia |
| Nkrataa | L2/09-026, L2/07-257 |
| Unicode Banbɔ | 6.0 | 2010 |
| Emoji Vɛɛhyen | 1.0 | 2015 |
| Unicode Din | Crossed Flags |
| Apam Foforo Din | Crossed Flags |
| Sɛ Ɔyare Yɛ | Two Flags |
| Unicode Hexadecimal | U+1F38C |
| Unicode Desimɛl | U+127884 |
| Ɛskeip Sikwens | \u1f38c |
| Kurom | 🏴☠️ Frankaa |
| Anommuo | 🚩 Fɛnhyia |
| Nkrataa | L2/09-026, L2/07-257 |
| Unicode Banbɔ | 6.0 | 2010 |
| Emoji Vɛɛhyen | 1.0 | 2015 |