The Skull Emoji was added to Unicode 6.0 in 2010 and Emoji 1.0 in 2015. It is also known as "death" and "skeleton." It is accessible on a variety of text messaging services, including Google, Apple, Skype, Samsung, Twitter, and Whatsapp.
πβ οΈπ΄β οΈ
Frequently used to allude to a mythological death for a somewhat imaginary and fantastical cause, such as death from excessive laughter or hunger.
A gray-white human skull with huge black eye sockets in the manner of a cartoon. Often conveying death metaphorically, such as death through excessive laughter, frustration, or love.
A human skull on top of two X-shaped bones, as seen on a pirate flag or poison sign. Previous Samsung designs had a yellow triangle with a skull and crossbones on it to denote dangerous chemicals.
Can signify several concepts of death or peril, such as "die of laughter" or "kill it with tremendous skill." Can also symbolise several pirate personalities or mascots.
In 2014, the Black Skull and Crossbones symbol was added to Unicode version 7.0.
This Unicode character does not have an emoji counterpart, hence it is shown as a monochrome character on most devices. Unicode has not proposed it for general exchange (RGI) as an emoji.
The skull and crossbones shown on pirate ships' black flag, popularly known as the Jolly Roger.
The Pirate Flag emoji is a combination of the ZWJ characters Black Flag, Width Connector, and Skull with Crossbones. They appear as a single emoji on devices that support them.
A monument or monuments used to mark burials. Each platform has a unique appearance, with distinct forms and inscriptions.Used to discuss death in a literal, figurative, and metaphysical sense.