The Emoji Wars: When a Simple Pictogram Divides the Whole Internet
Has the thumbs-up become passive-aggressive? A quick breakdown of the endless debates over the hidden meaning of emojis.
You reply 'ok' with a thumbs-up? For some, it's polite. For others, it's downright icy. Periodically, the internet erupts over the real meaning of emojis, and the generational misunderstanding is total.
The emojis 'banned' by Gen Z
Thumbs-up, classic smiley, red heart: for many young people, these emojis scream 'parent message'. They prefer the skull (dying of laughter), the white heart or no emoji at all. The result: the same text can seem warm or downright passive-aggressive depending on the age of the reader.
A multilingual headache in Luxembourg
In Luxembourg, where a single WhatsApp group often mixes Luxembourgish, French, German, Portuguese and English, the emoji sometimes serves as a common language. Except even there, the codes differ: a thumbs-up in a family chat doesn't carry the same weight as in a friends' group. Spoiler: nothing to worry about. These 'wars' are mostly a game, and the real lesson is that tone comes from context, not a single isolated pictogram.
Sources
- Decryptage editorial des debats viraux sur l'interpretation des emojis selon les generations et leur usage au Luxembourg
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