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Skull emoji

Emoji representing a human skull From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Skull emoji
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The Skull emoji (πŸ’€) is an emoji depicting a human skull. It was added to Unicode's Emoticon block in October 2010. Originally representing death or goth subculture, the emoji grew to represent a wide range of emotions by the early 2020s, including joy, laughter, and embarrassment. It is especially popular among members of Generation Z.

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Skull emoji as it appeared in Google's Noto Project

Development

An emoji depicting a skull was originally included in the proprietary emoji sets from SoftBank Mobile and au by KDDI. Using these sets as a source,[1] the Unicode Consortium included the skull emoji in their Unicode 6.0 standard, released in October 2010.[2] Prior to that, the skull emoji was available for iPhone users in Japan, initially using a specific Private Use Area for compatibility with SoftBank's set.[3] Following the discovery that installing Japanese apps unlocked the emoji keyboard, Apple released emoji support worldwide in 2011.[4]

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Evolution of meaning and usage

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Throughout the 2010s, the skull emoji retained its original meaning, symbolizing death or goth subculture.[5][6] In 2016, Wired reported that people were more likely to use the skull emoji when they posted online about their phones being broken, signifying that they are "socially dead".[7] The emoji had limited popularity, ranking 92nd among the most used emojis on Twitter in 2015.[8] It reached the top 10 in the United States by 2019, but remained outside the top 50 in other countries.[9] In the early 2020s, the skull emoji was popularized by Generation Z, the demographic cohort of people born between the mid-1990s and the early 2010s, who started using it as a replacement for the phrases "I'm dead" or "I'm dying" – short for "I'm dying of laughter" – to express joy or happiness,[10] as well as laughter.[11] They viewed Face with Tears of Joy emoji, the emoji previously used to convey these emotions, as "uncool",[12] due to its association with older generations.[11] Before this meaning of the skull emoji became popular, in 2015, the ghost emoji (πŸ‘») was used instead.[13] Over time, the skull emoji has evolved to represent a wide range of emotions,[14] including embarrassment.[15]

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Reception

Adam Aleksic of The Washington Post viewed the skull emoji as a symbol that represents humor or irony and believed that it became a punctuation mark. Comparing the emoji to a tone tag, he wrote: "Punctuating the text with a skull lightens the tone and signals humility".[16]

Kayleigh Dray of Stylist thought the popularization of the skull emoji was related to the COVID-19 pandemic and the "dystopian pandemic nightmare" it resulted in. "[T]he laugh-cry emoji has died a sad little death and been replaced with an ever-so-appropriate skull", wrote the journalist.[17]

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See also

References

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