The Secret Double Meanings of Emoji

Advertisement
By Caitlin Dewey, The Washington Post | Updated: 20 February 2016 15:36 IST
Recently, some engineers at the visual tech firm Curalate set out to make a tool that could automatically caption Instagrams with emoji. It was a chance to mess around with computer vision - complex models that consume such vast troves of data that they can recognize objects and suss out their meanings.

The tool, Emojini, did that pretty well: Given an Instagram of a bouquet, for instance, it would suggest the flower emoji. Given an Instagram of a horse race, it served up the horse and jockey.

But if you upload a picture of a can of Red Bull, for instance, Emojini associates it with the "open hands" emoji, not a glass or an ox. And if you upload a picture of a flower tattoo, it suggests a syringe - not a blossom, tulip, sunflower, rose or hibiscus.

In the course of developing the Emojini, Curalate's engineers had accidentally cracked a little-discussed code: They had uncovered the secondary, non-semantic meanings for emoji -- the ways people use certain symbols and icons that have nothing to do with their designer's intent or the physical object that they correspond to in the real world.

Advertisement

Aside from the Red Bull/open hands and tattoo/syringe pairings, they found that the goat is typically used to caption photos of athletes ("greatest of all time" = G.O.A.T.) and the raised fist often accompanies Instagrams of people dirt-biking. People use the "busts in silouette" -- they look like the Facebook icon - to mark selfies with strong backlighting. "Water closet" has become code for "woman crush." The dash symbol = vaping.

Advertisement

Those all join a few non-semantic uses that most people know about already: the peach and eggplant emoji rarely refer to produce, for instance; the "100" symbol is, in the words of Vann R. Newkirk II, "a very black in-reference to the phrase 'keeping it 100.'" In January, Quartz traced the rise of the key emoji, which basically denotes a life win - courtesy of DJ Khaled.

"What's really interesting about these results is that society has assigned specific meanings to emojis, even when they weren't the intention of the emoji creator," wrote Curalate's lead research engineer, Lou Kratz. "The EmojiNet demonstrates that ... emojis themselves are evolving into their own visual language."

Advertisement

Incidentally, Kratz isn't the only one probing the hidden depths of our emoji obsession. Both IBM and the Jozef Stefan Institute, a major European research center, have recently published papers that try to nail down the sentiments that different icons express, based on analyzing the contexts in which they're most frequently used. Generally speaking, they both found that face emoji correspond to their respective emotions: in other words, a smiling face is positive, a frowning face negative.

But outside of faces, things get trickier. The ambulance skews slightly positive. (?!) The Japanese fish cake is the second most-negative emoji of all. The "low brightness" symbol is extremely beloved - an Instagram search suggests that people use it to tag pictures where there's actually quite a lot of sun.

Advertisement

There's no explaining these associations, necessarily, except to say that people don't always use emoji semantically: There's an extra layer of abstract meaning, of unspoken communal agreement, that makes them slightly more than pictographs. Some linguists have compared emoji to onomatopoeia, words that sound like the thing they represent. In fact, it would appear that emoji sometimes look like the thing they represent, and they sometimes look like that thing's opposite, and they (sometimes!) even look like a tangentially related third concept.

Don't let this panic you, however: Perhaps the best thing about emoji and their communicative potential is that you can always impose your own meanings. I tried to figure out why the fish cake skews so negative, for instance - and all I learned was that people drop fish cakes on all kinds of distinctly non-fishy things.

© 2016 The Washington Post

 

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Further reading: Apps, Emojis, Facebook, Internet, Social
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. iQOO 15R Battery Capacity, Thickness Announced by Company
  2. Infinix Note 60, Note 60 Pro, Note 60 Ultra May Be Sold in These Variants
  3. Vivo X300 Max Tipped to Launch in March Alongside the Vivo X300 Ultra
  4. Mozilla Firefox Will Let You Decide How Much AI You Want in Your Browser
  5. The Sun Is Erupting: A Massive Sunspot Is Firing Powerful Solar Storms Toward Earth
  1. AI Identifies More Than 1,300 Unusual Objects in Hubble Space Telescope Images
  2. Scientists Track Rapidly Growing Sunspot Behind Intense Solar Storms Toward Earth
  3. Motorola Razr 70 Global Launch Seems Imminent as Foldable Phone Visits UAE’s TDRA Certification Database
  4. Crypto Wrench Attacks Surged in 2025, Total Recorded Losses Hit $41 Million: Report
  5. Philips TAA1009 In-Ear, SHP9500 Headphones Launched in India Alongside New Soundbar, Speaker Models
  6. Supreme Court Questions WhatsApp Policy of Sharing User Data With Meta Entities
  7. Nintendo Switch Becomes Best-Selling Nintendo Console Ever; Switch 2 Sales Cross 17 Million Units
  8. NASA’s Perseverance Makes History on Mars with Claude AI at the Helm
  9. Redmi K90 Ultra Tipped to Launch With Dimensity 9500 Chip, Active Cooling Fan
  10. Mozilla Firefox Will Let You Decide How Much AI You Want in Your Browser
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2026. All rights reserved.