Grawlix
Grawlix or obscenicon is the use of typographical symbols to replace profanity, typically using "unpronounceable" characters. Mainly used in cartoons and comics, it has been described as the graphical equivalent of a bleep censor. The first known grawlix appeared in November 1, 1901 story of Gene Carr's comic strip Lady Bountiful.
Description
Grawlix is the use of typographical symbols to replace profanity. Mainly used in cartoons and comics, it has been described as the graphical equivalent of a bleep censor.Grawlixes typically use "unpronounceable" characters that might be found on a typewriter or computer keyboard, including at signs, dollar signs, number signs, ampersands, percent signs, and asterisks. They may also feature other unusual shapes such as spirals. These characters may resemble the letters they replace, such as "$" standing in for "S".
History
The first known grawlix appeared in November 1, 1901 story of Gene Carr's comic strip Lady Bountiful, with the title "Lady Bountiful is Shocked": the cartoon depicts two children arguing, with one of their speech bubbles simply containing the characters "!*!-!-" followed by a spiral with a line around it and a series of lines around a dot. The character of Lady Bountiful objects to "such language".The grawlix continued to expand its usage throughout 1902 and 1903. In December 12, 1902, The Katzenjammer Kids became the second comic to adopt them. In 1964, American cartoonist Mort Walker popularized the term "grawlix" in his article Let's Get Down to Grawlixes, which he expanded upon in his book The Lexicon of Comicana.
The emoji represents a face with grawlixes over the mouth. It was proposed in 2016 and accepted into Unicode 10.0 in 2017.