Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Emojis The Modern Day Answer To Cave Paintings, One Tweet And Text At A Time

The Canadian Press, 01 Jul, 2015 04:30 PM
    TORONTO — People around the world have pledged their love, expressed their frustrations and declared their pressing need for pizza in billions of tweets in the last two years, all using emojis.
     
    The pictograms have become an integral part of online communication, according to the more than 10.1 billion tweets collected by website EmojiTracker since it launched on July 4, 2013.
     
    "They fill in body language, tone of voice, that sense of emotional nuance that you lose when you have just text in formal communication," said Gretchen McCulloch, a Montreal-based linguist and writer.
     
    The standards for emojis and other computerized text are controlled by the non-profit Unicode Consortium.
     
    On June 17, the group issued its latest update to the Unicode standard and added a bottle with a popping cork, a turkey and the oft-requested taco to its lineup of symbols.
     
    The taco emoji had been the subject of an online petition started by Taco Bell that grew to 32,000 signatures by the time the new symbol was released.
     
    The absence of a taco symbol and the presence of multiple forms of rice cakes and sushi reflect the Japanese origins of emojis.
     
    Originally developed by Japanese cellphone manufacturers, existing emojis became fully integrated into the wider standard for computer text in 2010.
     
    Since then, the Emoji Subcommittee of the Unicode Consortium has taken submissions from consortium members and the public at large on new additions. The number of emojis has grown to 1,281.
     
    The process has led to some idiosyncrasies. There are three distinct emojis for trains, but none for a high-five. Until this year, emojis representing faces and people were only available in a single colour.
     
    And emojis are displayed differently on different operating systems, which can lead to confusion.
     
    The dancer emoji, for instance, was proposed to the consortium as a symbol modelled on John Travolta in "Saturday Night Fever."
     
    Google's Android software stays relatively close to the original intention, while on Apple phones Travolta becomes a salsa-dancing woman in a long skirt.
     
    McCulloch said emojis can't necessarily be used to replace existing language. She points to the opening sentence of "Emoji Dick," a translation of Herman Melville's classic "Moby-Dick" that spins an emoji take on "Call me Ishmael."
     
    "Something like telephone, man, sailboat, whale, okay symbol — I don't know if that's linguistically specific," she said.
     
    Instead, she said, what people seem to do is use emojis to emphasize or illustrate what they're typing about, as someone would illustrate a tweet about shopping with shopping bags.
     
    Neil Cohn is a post-doctoral fellow studying visual language at the University of California, San Diego. He says teenagers using emojis are not all that different than early humans using cave paintings.
     
    Those drawings weren't just artistic expression, Cohn said, but were probably used to augment storytelling.
     
    "Using images integrated with spoken language, in this case with text, is as old as human communication," he said. "This is just an extension of that, siphoned through a technological tunnel."
     
    While the Canadian flag is represented as an emoji,
     
    McCulloch said she wishes Canadians had an emoji to call their own, beyond the Canadian flag.
     
    "We could have a moose emoji," she said. "That would be pretty cool."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Family Of Canadian Man Who Died In Laos Wants Answers, Demands Action From Govt

    Family Of Canadian Man Who Died In Laos Wants Answers, Demands Action From Govt
    A Canadian family is demanding action from the federal government after a 28-year-old man died under mysterious circumstances at an airport in Laos.

    Family Of Canadian Man Who Died In Laos Wants Answers, Demands Action From Govt

    Winnipeg Girl, Whose Family Went Public With Plea For Help, Gets Liver Transplant

    Winnipeg Girl, Whose Family Went Public With Plea For Help, Gets Liver Transplant
    TORONTO — A Winnipeg girl, whose family went public with its plea for a liver donor, was undergoing transplant surgery in Toronto on Monday after suddenly receiving word about a possible organ match.

    Winnipeg Girl, Whose Family Went Public With Plea For Help, Gets Liver Transplant

    Tories To Support NDP Motion To Ban Pay-To-Pay Fees Charged By Big Banks

    Tories To Support NDP Motion To Ban Pay-To-Pay Fees Charged By Big Banks
    Finance Minister Joe Oliver says the government is backing the motion to get rid of so-called pay-to-pay fees because people feel they are being nickeled and dimed by the big banks.

    Tories To Support NDP Motion To Ban Pay-To-Pay Fees Charged By Big Banks

    RCMP Officer Testifies In Case Of Man Accused Of Having Chemical Stockpile

    RCMP Officer Testifies In Case Of Man Accused Of Having Chemical Stockpile
    The woman's complaint in January prompted a search for Phillips and evacuations in two Halifax-area communities where chemicals were found, including what a police hazardous devices technician described as 750 bottles and other containers.

    RCMP Officer Testifies In Case Of Man Accused Of Having Chemical Stockpile

    Tie Between Two B.C. Doctors Forces Second Vote For Leader Of Professional Group

    Tie Between Two B.C. Doctors Forces Second Vote For Leader Of Professional Group
    Dr. Brian Day was declared the winner last week by just one vote, but the group's CEO Allan Seckel says there was another vote that should have been counted.

    Tie Between Two B.C. Doctors Forces Second Vote For Leader Of Professional Group

    Judge Nearly Declared Mistrial In Terror Case Over Crown's 'American' TV Closing

    The trial of a husband and wife accused of plotting to blow up the B.C. legislature came close to being declared a mistrial over the Crown's closing address, which the judge said was so inflammatory and inappropriate it took her breath away.

    Judge Nearly Declared Mistrial In Terror Case Over Crown's 'American' TV Closing