π¦
Duck
dΚk
Definitions
1
Animals Β· Wildlife
Common
Represents a duck, a common waterfowl with a broad bill, webbed feet, and distinctive quacking sound. Used to reference actual ducks, water activities, or farm settings.
Often used literally when discussing nature, farms, or outdoor activities involving water bodies.
Took the kids to feed the π¦ at the park today!
Family chat
Perfect weather for π¦ hunting this weekend!
Outdoor enthusiast group
While primarily a straightforward animal emoji, ducks have cultural significance in children's stories, folklore, and as symbols of calmness (appearing serene while paddling furiously underwater).
2
Slang Β· Metaphorical
Uncommon
Used metaphorically to represent someone or something awkward, out of place, or 'ducking' out of responsibilities. Can reference the idiom 'like water off a duck's back' to show resilience.
Less common than literal usage; context-dependent and may require additional text for clarity.
Feeling like a π¦ out of water at this fancy corporate event
Personal social media
The duck's waddling gait and occasional awkwardness have made it a metaphor for feeling out of place or uncomfortable in certain situations.
Evolution Timeline
2016
Added to Unicode 9.0 as part of expanded animal emoji set
Growing demand for nature and wildlife emojis
2018
Gained popularity in social media duck-feeding debates about bread vs. healthier alternatives
Conservation awareness about proper waterfowl feeding practices
Cultural Context
The phrase 'like water off a duck's back' (represented by π¦π¦βͺοΈ) is used to describe criticism or trouble that has no effect on someone.
The duck emoji is often associated with innocence and childhood, reflecting common children's activities like feeding ducks at parks or duck-themed nursery rhymes.
The rubber duck (sometimes represented by π¦ with π) has evolved from a children's bath toy to a programmer's debugging tool ('rubber duck debugging').
Regional Variations
Australia
Can reference the iconic 'duck' call in cricket when a batsman is out for zero runs.
United Kingdom
In British English, duck emoji may reference the term of endearment 'duck' commonly used in Midlands and Northern England.
Generational Usage
Gen_X: Primarily literal usage in nature contexts. May use in reference to duck hunting or outdoor activities with family.
Gen_Z: Used playfully in memes, especially 'duck supremacy' content. Sometimes references the viral 'peace was never an option' goose meme (using duck as substitute).
Older: Straightforward usage for nature references or when discussing feeding ducks at parks. Less likely to use in metaphorical contexts.
Millennials: Often used literally in outdoor activity posts or with children. Some use in workplace contexts for 'ducking' out of meetings or responsibilities.
Common Combinations
π¦π
Duck swimming or water activities involving ducks
Common representation of ducks in their natural habitat
π¦π
Feeding ducks bread (though increasingly seen with π« to discourage)
Traditional activity at parks, though attitudes are changing due to health concerns
π¦π
Reference to 'king duck' or the children's story 'The Ugly Duckling'
Often used playfully to elevate the status of ducks or reference transformation stories