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Using the wrong emoji at work can shift the meaning of your message. Staying curious about tone and generational preferences ...
Workers digging a pipeline in Argentina found the flattened skull of an ancient toddler, raising questions about its ...
Despite seeming like a universal language – and sometimes they do function that way – emojis can be at once more vague, and ...
According to Erica Dhawan, author of Digital Body Language: How to Build Trust and Connection, No Matter the Distance, people over 30 tend to use emoji according to their 'dictionary'.
Their go-to emojis are now the skull, crying face, and rock — ubiquitously used to express sarcasm, absurdity, or extreme hilarity. Gen Z ditches the laugh emoji for crying and skull faces ...
The 'face with crosses for eyes' and skull emoji can be used as code for murder. And while you might think that the ambulance would be a safe emoji to see on your child's phone, this may actually ...
In South Africa, a politician sent a skull emoji to a rival, claiming it was a Halloween joke. The recipient, however, felt threatened, proving that even a seemingly harmless emoji can land you in ...
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.
Social media users now argue that the phrase has been overused and has lost its shock value. 4 – Skull emoji (💀) The next emoji predicted to go extinct is the skull receiving a score of 30.1.
28.5% have the skull emoji as their go-to – with less than 10% choosing the rolling on the floor laughing smiley. However, whichever you use might just give away the generation to which you ...