Mahjong Tile Spring Symbol
The π¦ emoji represents a Mahjong tile labeled βSpring.β
U+1F026
π¦ is the Mahjong Tile Spring character from the Mahjong Tiles block. Itβs commonly used in games, UI elements, and themed messages where Mahjong tiles are referenced.
Mahjong Tile Spring Symbol Meaning
π¦ (Unicode name: MAHJONG TILE SPRING, code point U+1F026) represents the βSpringβ tile in Mahjong. In Mahjong-themed contexts, it can stand for the Spring season category used in some Mahjong sets and layouts. Because itβs a specific tile symbol, itβs often used to visually indicate a tile type in game menus, tutorials, scoreboards, or decorative graphics. Outside gaming, people may use it simply to signal βMahjongβ or to create a seasonal or spring-themed variation in captions, stickers, and digital designs.
Common uses
- β’Labeling Mahjong tile types in game menus or tutorials
- β’Using in digital stickers or seasonal Mahjong-themed posts
- β’Designing icons for Mahjong-related apps, dashboards, or widgets
- β’Representing βSpringβ in infographic-style game guides
- β’Adding flavor to chat messages during Mahjong events or streams
Examples
π¦ Mahjong Tile Spring - Copy & Meaning
- π¦Draw the π¦ tile and match it to your set.
- π¦Spring tiles (π¦) are readyβstart the round!
- π¦In this guide, π¦ represents the Spring tile.
- π¦My hand includes π¦ and two matching tiles.
- π¦Mahjong night: tiles like π¦ make it extra fun.
Variations
Ready to copy
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+1F026 | |
| HTML Entity | 🀦 | |
| HTML Code | 🀦 | |
| CSS | \1F026 |
FAQ
What is the Unicode name and code point for π¦?
Its Unicode name is βMAHJONG TILE SPRINGβ and its code point is U+1F026.
How can I copy π¦ in different formats for development?
You can use the character directly (π¦), the HTML entity (🀦), the CSS escape (\\1F026), or the JavaScript escape (\\u{1F026}).
What does π¦ usually mean in Mahjong contexts?
It typically represents the βSpringβ tile, used in Mahjong-themed displays, game UI, or tile references.
Will π¦ look the same on all devices?
The visual style can vary by font and platform, even though the underlying character is the same (U+1F026).