In principle, we have changed the way we communicate, people are verbal animals, and the progress of pendulum is starting to nostalgic swing. We are swiftly coming back to the roots of the cave wall painting, though, in more fun manner. We got no other explanations for the present trend of writing whole sentences, ever the whole emoji or icons, which is why we are sold. It is a great technique of communication, if nothing else for us who are forgetful of words, or maybe because we are getting old.
Emoji serves as punctuation, giving clues of how users understand the words they are using, as a point of exclamation. Typically, emoji tops the ideas instead of replacing them. The various orders could express a completely diverse story or idea, when we are used to reading conversations from left to right.
In the never-ending quest, the Japanese is the origin of the cutest emojis in the planet; after all they are the ones that created emojis. The Japanese created the emojis in 1995, when telecommunication firms competed for minds and hearts of people who were trying to comprehend the new age of virtual communication. All sorts of wacky misunderstandings ensued, without the visual clues of face to face chats.
Of course, now that all the cool users, especially the kids with their loud music and baggy pants are using emoji. They needed to slog by the Les Miserables and even zips from Sparknotes. Are emojis far too complicated to communicate in just using words? You may want to try adding emojis in your next chats, see as the magic unfolds, drag the screaming 20th century artworks, use the Italian flag in the search bar. The world is enjoying the emojis, because they are here to stay to spice up our conversations.