‘Withoutit,part
ofwhatprovides
a well-rounded,
communicative
messageis
missing’
LEASTUSED
MOSTCONTROVERSIAL
ubious distinc-
belongs to the
gunicon. In the
there’s been some
controversy over school
kidsfacing criminal
charges for sending
essages to each other
n icon.Some have been
andothers have received
pendedsentences.
In France a man was jailedfo
months after texting his ex-gi
handgun emoji because theju
the text the same as makinga
Unicode Consortium, aglob
non-profit organisation thats
standards for text in moderns
and decides on emoji, ruledth
should go. It has been replaced
a more innocuous and brightly
coloured water pistol.
is
i
a
U
c
reateningm
ththeg
pelle
Thatwouldbethe
ratherbizarresus-
pensionrailwayemoji.
Sowhyisiteventhere?
Becauseit’sbigin
Japan– andJapanwas
instrumentalinthehistoryofthesemodern-
dayhieroglyphics.
Infact,thereare 12 differentemojisfor
differenttypesoftrainsusedinthecountry,
includingthesuspensionrailway.
EMOJI
FACTS
Emojiswithfacesandheartsarethemostwidelyused, according to Brandwatch, a social
mediamonitoringagency.Thesearethetop 10 emojisusedonTwitter:
MOST ED
FACE WITH
TEARS OF JOY
LOUDLY
CRYING FACE
SMILING
FACE WITH
HEART-EYES
RED HEART
BACKHANDIN
RIGHT Thisem
to highlightlin
PURPLE HEART
Popular with
fans of Korean
supergroup BTS.
TWO HEARTS
SMILINGFACEWITH
SMILINGEYESP l
THINKING FACE
Often follows a
question, or can
express confusion.
FOLDED HANDS
A source of some
debate – are they
praying hands,
thanking hands, or
high-fivinghands?
Oftenusedto
h tit d
Jeremy Burge,whocallshimselfanemoji
historian and is the founder of reference
website Emojipedia, recently discovered
the little icons didn’t emerge in 1999 from
Japanese telecoms firm NTT Docomo, as
widely believed, but two years before that.
Softbank, a Tokyo-based conglomerate,
pioneered the first set of 90 emoji charac-
ters encoded into the text messages of the
phone itself, the Telegraph reports. “And the
early Japanese influence on emojis remains.”
Back in 1999, emoji (an amalgamation
of the Japanese word for pictures, “e”, and
letters, “moji”) were more practical than the
set of faces and emotions we use today.
“They were very practical,” he adds.
“The 1999 set had just five faces. But they
became so popular in Japan that if Western
technology companies wanted to get
involved in Japan, they had to add emoji
products.”
EMOJI ORIGINS
wwwww d m 151515 GGGG STSSTTT 2020120121
or three
rlfriendthe
dgedeemed
deaththreat.
al
etsthe
software
egun
dby
y
S
NDEXPOINTING
moji isoftenused
ks intweets.
SMILINGEYESPopular
whentalkingabout
goodtimesand
birthdays.
showgratitude,
accompaniedby
thewords“love”,
“good” and“family”.
GALLO IMAGES/GETTY IMAGES
NEWS