San Francisco Chronicle

For digital chats, emojis can have a way with words

-

When the Oxford English Dictionary declared an emoji its 2015 word of the year, it was a bit of a head scratcher.

The emoji it singled out — an image of a laughing yellow face crying tears of joy — did not fit most people’s definition of a word. To some, it was even less of a word than shortliste­d nominee “lumbersexu­al” (a young urban man who cultivates an appearance and style of dress suggestive of a rugged outdoor lifestyle).

But for linguists around the world, the announceme­nt wasn’t about whether the Oxford English Dictionary had lost it. (It hadn’t — most linguists agree a word is a discrete unit that is meaningful; emoji fit that definition.) Rather, it was a recognitio­n of the enormous effect yellow smiley faces and other colorful emojis representi­ng food, animals and hand gestures have had on the way people talk online.

Don’t believe them? A 2015 study by Bangor University linguistic­s professor Vyv Evans found that 80 percent of smartphone users in Britain use emojis. When the research focused on people under 25, almost all text with emojis. According to a SwiftKey report, 74 percent of Americans use emojis every day.

Aside from widespread adoption of the icons, which began after Apple made emojis available on its iOS mobile operating system in 2011, with Android following in 2013, emojis have been one of the biggest communicat­ion breakthrou­ghs since people took to the Internet.

Look at it this way, Evans said: There are estimates that as much as 70 percent of the meaning we derive from a face-to-face encounter with someone comes from nonverbal cues: facial expression­s, intonation, body language, pitch. Which means words account for only around 30 percent of what we say.

As an example, he noted the huge difference in meaning between saying “I love you” as a statement with a falling intonation as opposed to “I love you?”

Move this online, where e-mails, text messages and instant messages mostly allow us to communicat­e with words, and you can see how messages can lose their meaning or be misinterpr­eted. Evans even has a term for it: the Angry Jerk Phenomenon.

“You’ll recognize it instantly,” he said. “You get an e-mail from someone who you know to be calm and sane, and they come across as a completely angry jerk. When you press the send button on a message, the instant it is sent, you lose control over how it’s interprete­d.”

A December report from Bloomberg found that 8 trillion text messages are sent each year. That’s a lot of opportunit­ies for a message to be misinterpr­eted. Cue the emoji. Emojis originated in Japan in the late 1990s, when wireless carriers created sets of digital stickers people could use in text messages.

Elsewhere, people had long used emoticons — visual expression­s strung together using symbols such as parenthese­s, dashes and colons, like :) to denote a smiley face. Where text took the empathy out of messages, emojis and emoticons put it back in.

But emojis quickly surpassed emoticon use for two key reasons: There’s a lot more that people can communicat­e with emojis. (“I can make an emoji that’s a whale or a penguin,” said Internet language expert Gretchen McCulloch. “I don’t even know how I would do that with emoticons.”)

And once emojis were incorporat­ed into Unicode — an internatio­nal system that standardiz­es characters across different operating systems so when you type “:-)” into your iPhone or Android phone, the symbols auto- matically turn into a yellow smiley face — they became accessible and easy to use.

Add to that the belief that “humans as a collective species are programmed to use visual communicat­ion” (that’s from linguist Neil Cohn, whose own research focuses on how people have a biological inclinatio­n to draw things), and emojis became a no-brainer for digital communicat­ion.

Language experts note that the real innovation behind emojis lies in their ability to help people online say what they mean, so when they write “What the heck?” they can signify with an accompanyi­ng laughing emoji or an angry-faced emoji whether their statement is an expression of amusement or outrage.

The system might grow to include an emoji for every facial expression, gesture, food or flag. Or, as Cohn hopes, as the system matures, people will want fewer, but more useful emojis.

“Why isn’t there an emoji of someone with a face that has rolling eyes?” he said. “That would be really useful.”

 ?? McClatchy-Tribune News Service ?? Emojis can be a great way of communicat­ing, although you might go into a food coma if you go out for burgers, tacos, pizza and a bento box.
McClatchy-Tribune News Service Emojis can be a great way of communicat­ing, although you might go into a food coma if you go out for burgers, tacos, pizza and a bento box.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States