It's a historic
moment of recognition for little images that have been gaining popularity since
1999
Oxford
Dictionaries made history on Monday by announcing that their “Word of the Year”
would not be one of those old-fashioned, string-of-letters-type words at all.
The flag their editors are planting to sum up who we were in 2015 is this
pictograph, an acknowledgement of just how popular these pictures have become
in our (digital) daily lives
“Although emoji
have been a staple of texting teens for some time, emoji culture exploded into
the global mainstream over the past year,” the company’s team wrote in a press
release. “Emoji have come to embody a core aspect of living in a digital world
that is visually driven, emotionally expressive, and obsessively immediate.”
Oxford University
Press—which publishes both the august Oxford
English Dictionary and the lower-brow, more-modern Oxford Dictionaries
Online—partnered with keyboard-app company SwiftKey to determine which emoji
was getting the most play this past year. According to their data, the “Face
With Tears of Joy” emoji, also known as LOL Emoji or Laughing Emoji, comprised
nearly 20% of all emoji use in the U.S.
and the U.K. , where Oxford is based. The
runner-up in the U.S. ,
with 9% of usage, was this number
Caspar Grathwohl,
the president of Oxford Dictionaries, explained that their choice reflects the
walls-down world that we live in. “Emoji are becoming an increasingly rich form
of communication, one that transcends linguistic borders,” he said in a
statement. And their choice for the word of the year, he added, embodies the
“playfulness and intimacy” that characterizes emoji-using culture.
Though this marks
a historic moment of recognition for the pictures plastered throughout tweets
and texts, Oxford
has not added or defined any emoji in their actual databases. Nor, says a
spokesperson for the publisher, do they have plans to do so at this point. The
word emoji, however, has been in both the OED and Oxford Dictionaries Online since
2013.
Japanese
telecommunications planner Shigetaka Kurita is credited with inventing these
little images in 1999, taking the emoticons that had been gaining steam on the
Internet to an iconic level. Inspired by comics and street signs, the name for
the alphanumeric images comes from combining the Japanese words for picture
(e-) and character (moji). “It’s easy to write them off as just silly little
smiley faces or thumbs-up,” sociolinguist Ben Zimmer told TIME for a story on how emoji fit into humans’ long history of using pictures to
communicate. “But there’s an awful lot of people who are very
interested in treating them seriously.”
Lead of Structure:
WHO- Oxford Dictionary
WHERE- not mentioned
WHEN- not mentioned
WHAT- the word of the year is an emoji
WHY- the emojis have gained their popularity since 1999
HOW- not mentioned
Key Words:
1. pictograph 象形
2. staple 主要的(adj.) 訂書針(n.)
3. embody 使具體化
4. core ascept 核心概念
5. august 尊嚴的(adj.)
6. linguistic 語言學的
7. runner-up 亞軍
8. emoji 表情符號
9. transcend 超越
10. telecommunication 電信
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