New York (CNN Business) – Malas notices for the people who use the frequency em emoji 😂: ya no es genial.
In the last few weeks, generations of Internet connoisseurs have made videos and comments on TikTok about the most distinctive cells of culture. millennial the millennium that now Generation Z considers to be ingenious. The list includes adjusted jeans (verdict of Generation Z: quémalos), raya pain (verdict of Generation Z: ray in the middle of nowhere) and quizzes the most colorful of all, the popular emoji of llorar and reir that some millennials, including yo misma, usan scientos de veces al dÃa, o más.
«What happened to the giant emoji [?]», Asked a user in a comment from TikTok. Another answer: “it was done”. In a different video from a woman who said she had started dating when she said that she had no children, an adolescent commented: “At least 15 years old, I have to use these emoji pq [porque] ensure that we do not use it ».
“Uso de todo menos el emoji de risa”, said Walid Mohammed, 21 years old, a CNN company. “Dejé de usarlo hace un tiempo porque vi a majors personas usandolo, com mi mam, mis hermanos mayors y solo personas majors en general”.
For many members of Generation Z, the emoji 💀 has been converted into a popular replacement for the giant. It is the visual version of the phrase of the phrase “I die” or “I am sick”, which means that something is very amusing. Other acceptable alternatives: the emoji 😠(officially called “Loudly Crying Face” or rostro llorande con intensidad), or simply write “lol” , probably the rest).
Xavier Martin, 17 years old, says that the emoji 😂 is “so” and that “not much people” from his eda lo usa. Stacy Thiru, 21 years old, prefers real country emoji because he shows a more extreme emotion and is more dramatic. Dijo que ni sikiera podium find the emoji of llorar y reÃr en el teclado de su iPhone.
A similar emoji, called “Rolling on the Floor Laughing” (🤣, laughing and rolling in the floor), tampoco is fashionable. When the question arises about these emojis in a video game, Thiru hizo a music sigbaar. «Nee me gusta ese», dijo. “Ni siquiera mi mamá lo usa”.
“Face with Tears of Joy” (rostro with allegory of allegory), the official number of emojis that are rich and lory, is currently the most used emoji in Emojitracker, a web site that shows the use of emojis in real time on Twitter. View Emojipedia’s list of emojis most used on Twitter in 2020, while “Loudly Crying Face” occupies the second place. And it has long been a powerhouse: af 2017, Apple said that the giant emoji and llanto were the most popular in the United States.
“Tears of Joy is the victim of his own prophecy,” said Gretchen McCulloch, Internet linguist and author of “Because Internet: Understanding New Language Rules” (Porque Internet: Intending the New Rules of the Language).
“If the digital giant lasts for years and years of the same manner, it will start to look a bit sincerely … Hyperbole is being degraded with continuous use,” he said. Therefore Generation Z can be looking for new forms to indicate that there are different ways.
The members of Generation Z, born in 1996, were created at a time when the Internet was ubiquitous and, to a lesser extent, established in the palm of its hand. Millennials, in comparison, record a time before the constant internet traffic; many are launching worldwide emojis and the Internet of text messages through social media posts, including AOL Messenger. (The millennials born between 1981 and 1996, according to the Pew Research Center).
As an anecdote, the major generations tend to use emojis literally, while the most young ones are more creative vuelven, dijo Jeremy Burge, director of emojis of emojipedia, a web site of emojis dictionary. Emojipedia recently published a blog post that said: “It’s common in TikTok that the emoji of giant and lanto are for boomers”.
Members of Generation Z The CNN Business Diary that likes to assign meaningful propositions to emojis, that lies are transmitted to others in their cohort, at the expense of social media. For example, the emoji of a person living with a blank (🤠) and the person who is simply a child has to mean inconvenience. Others encounters a mountain of positive emojis, such as stars, arches, and hats, and they lie with the negative ones. “Our generation is very sarcastic,” said Martin.
Some adolescents and teenagers use emoji, as they are rich and lame, ironically, as if they were sitting next to their friends, to exaggerate. But, in general, these emoji are forbidden.
“For Generation Z, it’s the same as having an Android”, says Mohammed.