The new emojis include a face-palm face, fingers crossed, and a clown.
It is good news for avocado and bacon lovers the world over - the latest batch of new emoji has been released.
Unicode Consortium, the official body responsible for setting a standard of characters across the computing industry, has released 72 new emojis today - although it may take manufacturers a little longer to add them to handsets.
However, the update does not include a controversial rifle emoji, due to be included as part of the Rio Games section until, it was claimed, Apple and Microsoft complained.
But people with a phobia of clowns are in for a nasty surprise as the iconic circus clown face is also going to be included.
One of the concepts behind the scheduled update was creating gender pairs to fill existing gaps.
This means the dancing woman will be given a partner in the form of a dancing man, the bride emoji will be paired with a groom and a Mrs Clause will accompany the Santa emoji.
New hand gestures include the much-awaited fingers crossed emoji, a 'call me' signal, shaking hands and fist bumps.
Vain people across the world will be happy to see a selfie emoji.
Google announced this week that more than 200 million people upload images to the Google Photos application each month, and are responsible for an extraordinary 24 billion selfies.
A pregnant woman joins the ranks along with a facepalm and three more faces that look as if they are feeling a bit sick.
Popular foods considered missing are also on the list, with an avocado, paella, a pickle and a croissant making it to the shortlist.
New drinks include a glass of water, champagne and whisky on the rocks.
Animal lovers will be happy to know that the critters to be added to the list include an octopus, a rhino, an owl, a gorilla and a duck.
There's even going to be a black heart to send if you are feeling a bit alternative.
The last update saw faces with a greater range of skin tones, extra spots emoji and also the highly anticipated taco.
The method of adding new emoji isn't entirely simple.
They must first be approved by an organisation called the Unicode Consortium in California responsible for developing Unicode.
They select candidates from popular or topical requests. Candidates are also picked if there are existing gaps in current emoji - for example, Unicode 7.0 had a tiger, but not a lion.