The complimenting white stripes are toīe inclusive to those who are non-binary and intersex. Represents those without a gender identity. Version features three horizontal stripes and uses only two colors. The flag was created to represent those within the Agender community.Īgender folks may identify as having no gender, having an undefinable gender, notĪligning with any gender, gender-neural or neutrois, or choose not to label theirĪnother version of the Agender Pride Flag was created by Rumpus Parable in 2014. History: The Agender flag has seven horizontal stripes and was created in the year of 2014īy Salem X.
Agender folks may have any type of expression and use any set of pronouns or no pronouns. The term Agender can be literally translated to ‘without gender’.
The flag that the Rainbow Flag emoji ?️? depicts was created in 1978 by Gilbert Baker, who was commissioned to design the flag by famous politician and iconic gay rights activist Harvey Milk. How the the rainbow flag became a symbol of LGBTQ Pride The Rainbow Flag emoji ?️? is also often used alongside many other emoji used to represent non- cishet couples such as the Two Men Holding Hands emoji ?, the Kiss: Woman, Woman emoji ?❤️??, and the variations of the Couple with Heart emoji ?. Since its approval in 2020, the Transgender Flag emoji ?️⚧️ has also frequently been used alongside the Rainbow Flag emoji ?️? when a person identifies as a member of-or supports-both communities. The Rainbow emoji ? is still frequently used alongside the Rainbow Flag emoji ?️?. Prior to the addition of the Rainbow Flag emoji ?️?, the Rainbow emoji ? was used (in terms of emoji) to symbolize Pride in reference to the flag. Slater’s proposal gained wide support and the Rainbow Flag emoji ?️? was officially approved in 2016. Slater referred to the flag as “a powerful and potent symbol of not only current gay rights struggles, but the history of gay rights in America” and provided evidence to the Consortium that the flag had been used to symbolize Gay Pride since the 1970s. On June 27, 2015, Noah Slater sent an email to the Unicode Consortium-the organization that approves new emoji-and requested that they officially add an emoji that depicted a rainbow flag. The Microsoft version of the emoji depicts the flag attached to a grey flag pole. On Twitter, the flag resembles a rectangle with rounded corners. On most major platforms, the emoji depicts a flag waving in the wind that has, starting from the top, a red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and violet stripe. The emoji is a combination of the White Flag emoji ?️ and the Rainbow emoji ?. The Rainbow Flag emoji ?️?, also popularly called Pride Flag emoji, was added to Emoji 4.0 in 2016.