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🈸

Japanese “application” button Emoji

The 🈸 symbol is a Japanese “application” button indicator used for requests and form actions.

U+1F238

🈸 represents a Japanese “application” button. It’s commonly used to label actions like applying, requesting, or submitting information. Copy it directly for UI text, posts, and design mockups.

Japanese “application” button Emoji Meaning

🈸 (U+1F238) is labeled in Unicode as the “JAPANESE ‘APPLICATION’ BUTTON.” Visually, it’s used like a call-to-action badge in Japanese contexts, indicating that something can be applied for, requested, or submitted. In practice, designers and communicators often reuse it as a compact signifier for forms, registration steps, job applications, membership requests, or other “apply now” type actions. Because it’s a button-style pictogram, it works well next to text like “Apply,” “Request access,” or “Submit your application,” especially when you want a clear, internationally recognizable UI cue.

Common uses

  • Labeling a “Submit application” or “Apply now” action in a UI
  • Annotating forms and request pages (e.g., registration, enrollment, access requests)
  • Marking content as requiring an application or eligibility check
  • Adding a visual badge to announcements (scholarships, programs, grants)
  • Using as an icon next to “Application” categories in menus or dashboards

Examples

🈸 Japanese “Application” Button

  • 🈸🈸 Apply for an account
  • 🈸Fill in the form and tap 🈸 Submit
  • 🈸Applicants: 🈸 Application required
  • 🈸Request access — 🈸 apply here
  • 🈸Course enrollment: 🈸 application accepted

Variations

Ready to copy

Technical codes

UnicodeU+1F238
HTML Entity🈸
HTML Code🈸
CSS\1F238

FAQ

What does 🈸 mean?

🈸 is the Unicode symbol for a Japanese “application” button, used to indicate applying, requesting, or submitting an application.

What is the Unicode codepoint for 🈸?

Its Unicode codepoint is U+1F238.

How can I copy 🈸 using HTML or CSS?

HTML entity: 🈸. CSS escape: \\1F238.

Is 🈸 used for forms and “apply” buttons in app UI?

Yes—many people use it as a compact button-like badge next to text such as “Apply,” “Request access,” or “Submit.”

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