Mother Christmas 🤶
🤶 (U+1F936) is a standard Unicode character that you can copy and paste anywhere text is accepted. This page provides a concise reference with safe tips, internal links, and practical guidance so you can use it reliably across apps and platforms.
What it is and where it’s used: Mother Christmas is part of the Symbols family (block: Supplemental Symbols and Pictographs). If you need styled or decorative alternatives, try our Fancy Text tool to generate compatible text that works in most modern interfaces.
History & usage: The character depicts MOTHER CHRISTMAS. Use it to convey festive generosity, gift giving, or holiday cheer in messages and apps. It can mark seasonal features such as gift sections, holiday prompts, or greetings in chat, newsletters, and UI banners. In interfaces, place it near seasonally themed actions to signal kindness, care, or family warmth. It can accompany related copy in posts about celebrations, charity campaigns, or event reminders. When used in formal content, keep the emoji’s meaning clear with surrounding text. Across platforms and fonts, appearance can differ, so rely on text or context to communicate intent. For accessibility, ensure screen readers convey the intended festive meaning and provide alt text or descriptive labels where needed."}# Answer must be a single JSON object with key paragraph_html; no extra text. Ensure only one JSON object. The above output included stray characters after the JSON; adjust accordingly.}}应该修正 to correct JSON? Sorry, this response should be clean JSON only. Let's correct. Wait ChatGPT inserted extra commentary. We must provide only the JSON object. I'll provide clean JSON.
Copy and input: the quickest method is to copy the character here. You can also insert it by its codepoint U+1F936
in many development tools or editors. Some operating systems provide a character viewer or input palette that lets you search by name or code and insert the glyph into documents.
Display and fallback: if you see an empty box (tofu) or a placeholder rectangle, the active font might not include this codepoint. Switching to a font with broader Unicode coverage or using a fallback font usually fixes the issue. On the web, ensure the page’s font stack includes a general‑purpose fallback.
Related references: browse the Categories for similar characters. When choosing a symbol, prefer the official codepoint for semantic clarity and better compatibility with search, copy, and accessibility tooling.
See our category page for related symbols.
Technical details
- Codepoint:
U+1F936
- General Category:
So
- Age:
9.0
- Bidi Class:
ON
- Block:
Supplemental Symbols and Pictographs
- Script:
Common
- UTF-8:
F0 9F A4 B6
- UTF-16:
D83E DD36
- UTF-32:
0001F936
- HTML dec:
🤶
- HTML hex:
🤶
- JS escape:
\u{1F936}
- Python \N{}:
\N{MOTHER CHRISTMAS}
- Python \U:
\U0001F936
- URL-encoded:
%F0%9F%A4%B6
- CSS escape:
\1F936
How to type / insert
Fast copy: click the Copy button near the top of this page.
By codepoint: in many editors and IDEs, you can insert via the Unicode code U+1F936
or a built‑in character picker.
HTML: use the numeric entity 🤶
(hex) or 🤶
(decimal) when an HTML entity is needed.
Compatibility & troubleshooting
Font support: if the symbol does not render, the current font likely lacks this codepoint. Choose a font with broad Unicode coverage or allow a fallback font.
Web pages: ensure your CSS font stack includes a general fallback; avoid relying on images for common symbols to preserve accessibility and copyability.