🚼
Appearance
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🚼︎ | 🚼️ | |||||||
Text style is forced with ⟨︎⟩ and emoji style with ⟨️⟩. | ||||||||
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Translingual
[edit]Description
[edit]Depiction of a baby (but see usage notes).
Symbol
[edit]🚼
- A baby changing station.
- A baby; fertility, birth or pregnancy.
- 1957, T. R. Carskadon, George Henry Soule, USA in New Dimensions: The Measure and Promise of America's Resources, a Twentieth Century Fund Survey (in English), Macmillan Publishers, page 10:
- Every baby symbol represents 2 births per 1000 population
- 2021, Jürgen Brater, Unnützes Medizinwissen: Fakten und Geschichten, die selbst den Arzt verblüffen [Useless Medical Knowledge: Facts and stories that amaze even the doctor] (in German), Yes Publishing, →ISBN, page 90:
- Nachfolgend die Anzahl der Kaiserschnitte pro 100 Geburten in den EU-Ländern im Jahr 2018:
🚼 Polen 38,9 …- The following is the number of cesarean sections per 100 births in EU countries in 2018:
🚼 Poland 38.9 …
- The following is the number of cesarean sections per 100 births in EU countries in 2018:
Usage notes
[edit]- Depictions of the symbol vary. Common variations include a diapered baby facing forwards with arms and legs extended or a baby crawling sideways,[1][2] and a person leaning over (changing) a baby laying on a surface or changing table.
- The latter symbol (named "nursery or baby care" and designated PF 023), with a baby bottle (🍼) in the top left, is part of the ISO 7001 set of pictograms and symbols for "public information" by the International Organization for Standardization.[3]
- An an emoji, the most common display on operating systems (most of which depict the symbol within an orange or blue box) is the baby facing forwards. iOS, WhatsApp and Telegram—which uses animated version's of iOS's emoji—depict a baby crawling.[4] The Unicode character itself, released in Unicode 6.0 in October 2010,[5] displays the former.[6]
Gallery
[edit]-
ISO 7001
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Variant of the symbol in the Netherlands
Synonyms
[edit]See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Gjoko Muratovski (2021 December) Research for Designers: A Guide to Methods and Practice, SAGE Publications, →ISBN, page 217
- ^ Carlos Rosa and Emilia Duarte (2022 January 13) Developments in Design Research and Practice: Best Papers from 10th Senses and Sensibility 2019: Lost in (G)localization, Springer International Publishing, →ISBN, pages 49–50
- ^ International Organization for Standardization (ISO) (2023 February) “Public information symbols”, in ISO 7001:2023: Graphical symbols — Registered public information symbols, 4 edition, ISO
- ^ “🚼 Baby Symbol”, in Emojipedia[1], 2023 October 5 (last accessed), Emoji Designs
- ^ “Version 6.0.0”, in The Unicode Standard[2], Unicode Consortium, 2010 October 11, retrieved 5 October 2023
- ^ “Version 15.1”, in The Unicode Standard[3], Unicode Consortium, 2023 September 12, retrieved 5 October 2023, Transport and Map Symbols, page 2