Web Semantics: emoji use and popularity

*Emoji are a major factor in the drift of vernacular language away from literary paper-based text.

https://slim-weight.info/2016/02/new-emoji-popularity-rankings/%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E%3Cdiv%3E%3C/div%3E%3Cdiv%3E%3C/div%3E%3Cp class="paywall">(…)

"Reaching Emoji Adulthood

"So how long does it take for an emoji to become popular? “Face with Tears of Joy” is one of if not the most popular emoji, deemed 2015’s Oxford English Dictionary’s word of the year, and has long dominated Twitter. But let’s try and track its ascent, if we can.

"Face with Tears of Joy was approved by Unicode in 2010, and has enjoyed a spot in the “most popular” category for all of 2015, according to Emojipedia. It’s hard to tell when exactly the emoji broke into the top echelon, but the earliest screenshot of Emojipedia available via Wayback Machine shows that on August 1, 2013, Face with Tears of Joy was included in its popular emoji category. According to another Wayback Machine screenshot, Face with Tears of Joy was the second-most-used emoji on Twitter spot as of July 26.

"Just to offer a little perspective: EmojiXpress says Face with Years of Joy has been sent over 7 million times, while the most popular new emoji Face with Rolling Eyes was sent about 290,000 times during the same time period. In Face with Rolling Eyes’s defense, it’s still an emoji baby, and you get used to your old standbys—especially when they show up in the tab containing your recently used emoji, often the first place your thumb goes.

" “It seems to me a lot of people use the same emoji frequently, more than seeking out new ones,” says Emojipedia’s Burge. He also points out that we come to cherish certain emoji because they start to take on personal significance. “Sometimes a particular emoji may get an alternative meaning among a friendship group, which encourages its ongoing use.” And vice versa for new emoji: You’re taking a big risk using one if the recipient just doesn’t understand—or worse yet, hasn’t upgraded to iOS 9.1 or has an Android phone and can’t even see it. “I might stick to a ‘safe’ emoji that I know works on all platforms,” he says…."