πŸ§β€β™‚οΈ

Deaf Man

def man
Unicode: 1F9CF-200D-2642-FE0F
Added: 12.0
Category: People & Body
#20
Global Ranking
accessible
Accessibility
common
Usage Level

Definitions

1
People Β· Accessibility Common
Represents a deaf or hard of hearing man, often used to indicate hearing disability, Deaf culture, or sign language communication.
Used in conversations about accessibility, disability representation, or to identify oneself or others as deaf.
My brother πŸ§β€β™‚οΈ is coming to visit next week, so I've been practicing my sign language.
Personal message
As a πŸ§β€β™‚οΈ, I appreciate when videos have proper captions. #DeafAwareness
Social media post
Part of disability representation in emoji, recognizing Deaf culture and community. Sign language is a distinct language, not just a communication tool.
2
Communication Β· Gesture Common
Used to indicate someone is using or learning sign language, regardless of hearing status.
Often used in educational contexts or to indicate interest in sign language.
Started my ASL course today πŸ§β€β™‚οΈ - it's challenging but so interesting!
Social media update
Sign language varies by country and region, with American Sign Language (ASL) being distinct from British Sign Language (BSL).

Evolution Timeline

2019
Introduction of deaf person emoji as part of Unicode 12.0's accessibility focus.
Growing advocacy for disability representation in digital communication.
2020
Increased usage during COVID-19 pandemic as mask wearing created communication barriers for deaf people.
Pandemic highlighted accessibility challenges for deaf community.

Cultural Context

Many deaf people distinguish between 'deaf' (audiological condition) and 'Deaf' (cultural identity and community). This emoji can represent both concepts.
The emoji represents the recognition of Deaf culture as a distinct cultural and linguistic minority, not just a medical condition.
Part of Unicode's efforts to increase disability representation in emoji, alongside wheelchair users and other accessibility symbols.
Sign languages vary by country and are not universal. ASL (US) and BSL (UK) are completely different languages despite both countries speaking English.

Regional Variations

United Kingdom Associated with BSL (British Sign Language) which differs significantly from ASL.
United States Commonly associated with ASL (American Sign Language) and American Deaf culture.

Generational Usage

Gen_X: Less frequent usage, typically in family communication about deaf relatives or accessibility needs.
Gen_Z: Frequently used for disability representation and inclusion. Often appears in educational contexts about sign language.
Older: Limited usage, primarily in direct reference to deafness or hearing loss.
Millennials: Used in advocacy contexts and workplace inclusion discussions about accessibility.

Common Combinations

πŸ§β€β™‚οΈπŸ‘¨β€πŸ«
Sign language teacher or instructor
Represents ASL/BSL education or a deaf educator
πŸ§β€β™‚οΈπŸ‘¨β€πŸ‘©β€πŸ‘§β€πŸ‘¦
Deaf family member or deaf-inclusive family
Represents families with deaf members or CODA (Children of Deaf Adults)
πŸ§β€β™‚οΈπŸŽ“
Deaf education or deaf graduate
Often used for Deaf schools or universities like Gallaudet

Related Emojis