News
10h
Daily Maverick on MSNThumbs up: good or passive aggressive? How emojis became the most confusing kind of online languageDespite seeming like a universal language – and sometimes they do function that way – emojis can be at once more vague, and ...
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Cosmopolitan India on MSNWhy Gen Z is cancelling the thumbs up emojiWhat once meant a casual “okay” now screams “I am old and out of touch.” Here’s why the humble thumbs up is officially cringe.
iOS 18 adds fresh emojis that say what words can’t. From grossed out to guilty, here’s every new one and how it fits into your texts.
With iOS 26, Apple is now letting users combine multiple emojis to create new ones. The feature relies on Apple Intelligence, and uses the existing Genmoji feature to work.
Owen To Man-kwan, 15, Tsuen Wan Public Ho Chuen Yiu Memorial College: The skull emoji has completely taken over online humour, and I understand the frustration.
As Gen Z favors skull and crying emojis over the traditional laughing emoji, content creators highlight their unique approach to humor.
While most popular characters are harmless fun, other seemingly-innocent symbols have secret sinister meanings.
From the peach to the skull emoji, the experts at the English class platform Preply have explained the difference between what emojis used to mean versus how they’re actually being used.
It stands to reason that, like a Valentine's Day heart, a red heart emoji means love. But what does a white heart emoji mean? And how do you use it?
An Irish emoji expert has predicted the most-used ones for 2025 and says the laughing face is “the millennial go-to” and is being swapped for the skull emoji by Gen-Z. Dubliner Keith Broni, 35 ...
Sentiment analysis on social media suggests that certain emoji and internet acronyms are now falling out of favor, either being used less frequently, or attracting negative comments. Top of the ...
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