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A symbol for email. Depicted as the back of an envelope imprinted with a capital letter E (for electronic) or @ (at) sign. Commonly used as an icon before an email address. The envelope is generally white with the E or @ symbols shown in blue.
Inbox Tray. A paper tray with a down arrow on top, as a symbol for an email inbox. Generally depicted as a white or wooden try with a red arrow. Samsung and Twitter's arrows are green, WhatsApp's gray. May be used for various digital activity, including downloading, messaging, and emailing.
Santa Claus, sometimes referred to as Father Christmas, brings joy to children at Christmas time. Displayed with a beard and red festive hat. The Santa emoji had a frown on Android 4.4, which was resolved in Android 5.0. See also: Christmas emoji list. Note: Father Christmas has a different origin to Santa Claus but both are represented by this single emoji.
Folded Hands. Two hands placed firmly together, meaning please or thank you in Japanese culture. A common alternative use for this emoji is for prayer, using the same gesture as praying hands.
Four Leaf Clover. A four-leaf clover, a symbol of good luck. Depicted as a bright green sprig of clover, with four, heart-shaped leaves. Not to be confused with the three-leaf ☘️ Shamrock, though this emoji does tend to spike in popularity on St Patrick’s Day.
A balloon on a string, as decorates a birthday party. Generally depicted in red, though WhatsApp’s is pink and Google’s orangish-red. Commonly used to convey congratulations and celebration, especially when wishing someone a happy birthday.
Copy and paste any flag emoji from this list and it will show on all supported platforms. All emojis on this page are RGI (Recommended for General Interchange by Unicode) except Flag for Texas which is supported by WhatsApp only.
Copy and paste emojis for Twitter / X and view the Twemoji emoji list with new emojis now displayed.
A mobile phone (cell phone), as used to text, check social media, or take selfies. Depicted as a black or gray smartphone with a generic blue screen or multicolored app icons.
Clapping Hands. Two hands clapping emoji, which when used multiple times can be used as a round of applause. Clapping Hands was approved as part of Unicode 6.0 in 2010 under the name "Clapping Hands Sign" and added to Emoji 1.0 in 2015.