See it plastered everywhere these days
The skull and crossbones has pirate connotations. Or just for danger/death.
It was added to Unicode in 1993 so it’s an original emoji.
Submitted 10 months ago by fastandcurious@lemmy.world to nostupidquestions@lemmy.world
See it plastered everywhere these days
The skull and crossbones has pirate connotations. Or just for danger/death.
It was added to Unicode in 1993 so it’s an original emoji.
It was also originally more used in a context of rebellion and trying to be edgy/cool. Rather than the irony wrapped use it has nowadays.
The skull is what’s used. Skull and crossbones has never really had another meaning.
1993, wow. That’s OG.
Not answering the question, but Lemmy lets you edit the title so you can fix it directly :)
Sometimes I might copy the original title into the post body, so that the context of the replies still make sense
I guess I’ll put it in quotation marks, Thanks!
Good to know, thanks!
I don’t really know what “original use” would mean – most emojis aren’t really made with some specific usage in mind, they’re just programs. The use is to be able to show a skull when you wanna
A whitish-gray, cartoon-styled human skull with large, black eye sockets. Commonly expresses figurative death, e.g., dying from extreme laughter, frustration, or affection.
Popular around Halloween. Not to be confused with ☠️ Skull and Crossbones, though their applications may overlap.
Skull was approved as part of Unicode 6.0 in 2010 and added to Emoji 1.0 in 2015.
Lol I didn’t know Emojipedia existed. Might be amusing. Thanks!
Yyaaaarrrrr
I forgor 💀
vind@lemmy.world 10 months ago
The one you’re probably thinking of is just the skull 💀 not the skull and bones ☠️. The skull on it’s own means “dead” metaphorically, often from “dying of laughter” or dying of cringe depending on the contexts
fastandcurious@lemmy.world 10 months ago
Ah sorry, you are right