Twitter Emoji



Twitter on iOS devices use native emojis. Hashflags Aside from the standard emojis, Twitter also created custom emojis specifically for certain events, also called Hashflags. However, they are only available for a limited time. A few examples are #BlackLivesMatter and #Vote. Twitter supports all standard emojis, and these can be inserted via emoji keyboard or picker. Alternatively emojis can be copy and pasted by choosing from the emojis on this page. Twemoji is an open source emoji project, created and owned by Twitter. Nowadays emoji exist on all popular platforms: Windows, Linux, Mac OS, Android and Windows phone. All popular websites and applications allow using emoji among with emoticons. Use emoji on Facebook and Twitter, for blogging, chatting and messaging, in documents, presentations and much more! You can read more about emoji on the Wikipedia.

Twitter has been working on several new features recently, and we have covered some of them here in the last few weeks. Now the social network is considering implementing emoji reactions for other tweets, just as Facebook does for posts.

As noted by The Verge, Twitter has been sending out a survey to a small number of users in which the company shows a new reaction system that might be added to the social network. The design is similar to Facebook’s reactions, which let users react to a post with an emoji — including happy, sad, and angry faces.

In this survey, Twitter shows some mockups of this new reaction system and asks users which one they prefer. In one of the images, there are the following reactions: Like, Funny, Interesting, Sad, Awesome, Support, and Angry. In another concept, the Awesome reaction uses a fire emoji instead of a surprised face, while the Support reaction shows raised hands instead of a hugging emoji.

Twitter is also looking for a way to let users make it clear that they dislike a tweet, while also being concerned about how users will feel about this feature. In another question in the survey, the company asks how the user would react to receiving a downvote or dislike on Twitter. One of the answers available is “I may hesitate to Tweet in the future for fear of receiving negative reactions.”

It’s worth noting that this hasn’t been implemented on Twitter so far, and it’s unclear whether the company will actually add this to the social network, which is why they’re asking users what they think about the feature.

Would you like to have emoji reactions on Twitter? Let us know in the comments below.

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Twitter Emoji Flags

Emoji have become Twitter's very own digital bumper stickers or laptop decorations. The tiny images next to your handle are yet another way to express yourself online.

SEE ALSO: U.S. visa applicants may have to hand over their social media handles

An image is worth a thousand words, after all, and an emoji certainly adds more intrigue than explicitly stuffing your political preferences into your handle. Emoji are readily available and allowed (and searchable) in Twitter handles, and they are popping up everywhere.

Twitter emoji indicate who you are, who you want to be, and how you want others to think of you. But first you have to know what the emoji even mean, so we asked people who use the images in their online identities.

Here's some of the most pervasive symbols floating throughout our Twitter feeds. Now you'll be up to speed on what's really going on in your notifications.

🌹 Rose 🌹

Meaning: Democratic Socialist

The rose emoji is the best representation for the symbol of the political group, Democratic Socialists of America, or DSA.

One user, Keith Spencer, who uses the rose in his Twitter handle, knows the long history of the red rose used for labor groups and social democrats. For him the emoji connects him to like-minded people.

'I thought it seemed like a good idea to help us find each other,' he said in an email. 'It has the added benefit of being subtle enough that you can identify yourself as a socialist without, say, a random stranger noticing and then trolling you for it.'

Thomas Moore, a 20-year-old college student and self-proclaimed activist who has since changed his handle emoji from a rose to a red balloon, said he had put the rose in his handle for its meaning beyond DSA, 'The fragility of the rose represents the concern for the welfare of the downtrodden, its petals are symbolic of the ever growing following the movement has.'

The Democratic Socialists of America have embraced the rose emoji to match the group's logo and identity.

It's not you. It's Capitalism. #TrySocialism
Join Us: https://t.co/oYTu3aCBAa 🌹 pic.twitter.com/V9IIVnCMhK

— DSA 🌹 (@DemSocialists) March 27, 2017

❄️ Snowflake ❄️

Meaning: Special, fragile, hypersensitive — but also unique and strong in numbers

The snowflake emoji is harder to pin down. 'Snowflake' has been used for years as an insult to both the left and right. But through the 2016 election to today it's had something of a resurgence to mostly describe a perceived weaker, emotionally needy and 'special' Snowflake Generation.

While it's long been used by conservatives as an insult to liberals and progressives (just look at right-wing commentator Tomi Lahren's Snowflake Awards, which 'honored' Meryl Streep), it's more recently been repurposed by the very people it's supposed to offend. Liberals have taken the term and flipped it.

Author and activist Rebecca Solnit, who coined the term 'mansplaining,' wrote a 'defense of snowflakes,' explaining how when snowflakes come together they can accomplish a lot. 'Individually snowflakes are exquisite; together they are superpowers,' she wrote.

— Tomi Lahren (@TomiLahren) February 17, 2017

Here are some examples of people proudly repping the snowflake on Twitter:

I accidentally wore a shirt to work that has a hole in the elbow, so please no one look at my elbows

— ❄James️️❄️️ (@CutlassJames) May 31, 2017

Can I take a moment to mention just how fantastic and also ironic it is that Trump is taking Fox 'news' down w/him on way out the door?

— Keithb ❄️️ (@AUkeibro) May 30, 2017

🗽 Lady Liberty 🗽

Meaning: Pro-immigration

A segment of the resistance has affiliated themselves with Lady Liberty. One Twitter user who has since changed their handle wrote that the emoji is 'code for 'what if immigration is good?' Other pro-immigration and open borders supporters have used Lady Liberty in their online names in the months since Trump was elected. It's one of several emoji that stand for anti-Trump sentiments and might be the closest thing to a #Resistance emoji.

Things are pretty bad for the GOP when even 8th graders don't want to associate with them. #🌊 https://t.co/hm6iOdwvlf

— Berta bright🗽 (@Bertabright8) May 29, 2017

Day 53
The GOP is craven.
Find some joy in everyday life because you need it and we need you.
We are our greatest strength.
💜✊💜#RESIST

Twitter Emoji

— ..she persisted. 🗽 (@leahmcelrath) March 14, 2017

Glass of milk

Meaning: Member of the alt-right and white nationalist

For someone like white nationalist Richard Spencer, using a seemingly innocuous icon like a glass of milk works to represent a certain viewpoint until everyone starts to know what it means.

Spencer had put a glass of milk in his Twitter handle earlier this year as an ironic symbol of white supremacy. Through some very racist logic, milk came to mean all things white nationalist based on an article about Europeans being mostly lactose tolerant and able to handle drinking milk.

Spencer wrote to us through Twitter, explaining what the milk symbol meant to him. 'The story, as I understand it, is as follows..,' he wrote. 'Some hysterical leftist literally argues that drinking milk is 'racist' because Europeans (& Central Asians) are lactose tolerant.' It appears Spencer is citing a Mother Jones article that looked into the U.S. dietary guidelines for milk and suggested they may be discriminatory since not everyone, like African-Americans, needs to drink as much milk as recommended.

Spencer continued, 'Then some Alt-Right kids go publicly guzzle milk on Shia leBoeuf's (sic) live stream HWNDU. Milk becomes 'a thing.' He concluded, 'Like Pepe, milk is now a symbol of white identity, both ironical and serious.'

@sashajol Like Pepe, milk is now a symbol of White identity, both ironical and serious.

— Richard 🐸 Spencer (@RichardBSpencer) March 24, 2017

The glass of milk — lauded by the alt-right as their new accidental symbol, if only briefly — was very reminiscent of how Pepe the Frog became a neo-Nazi hate symbol after it was transformed from innocent cartoon to meme to alt-right identifier. Drivers trust input devices.

Spencer quickly moved on from the racist milk icon and is already using another provocative emoji, most recently Pepe.

Why write an article about this? Very few people are 'under attack' by Greg Johnson that this is relevant outside your friends.

— J. Ketch 🥛 (@JKetch89) June 1, 2017

🇸🇾 Syrian Flag 🇸🇾

Meaning: Alt-right, MAGA supporters, and also Syrians and supporters

Many users with the glass of milk soon pivoted to the Syrian flag after Trump ordered an air strike in Syria in April. Spencer switched to the flag emoji, but in the past few weeks quickly changed to the 'OK' hand gesture 👌, which has been linked to 'white power' (though it's not as ubiquitous as Spencer would want — the Anti Defamation League said the organization doesn't recognize the emoji as not a hate symbol), and then back to Pepe the Frog. It's fitting since the cartoon's creator just killed off Pepe after he couldn't bear that it had became a hate symbol.

If anything, the Syrian flag's brief moment in white nationalists' handles shows how quickly this subgroup switches out emoji for new symbols.

Months after the Syria strike, here's someone who still had the flag in their handle. They posted that they are a supporter of Syrian president Bashar al-Assad and retweet Infowars contributor Joseph Paul Watson, who jumped 'off the Trump train' after Trump's Syria attack in April.

you can not win by sidelining minorities.Thats why Assad won media propaganda.

— Sunni Assadist🇸🇾 (@JulienBaptiste4) June 1, 2017

📎 Paper Clip 📎

Meaning: In solidarity with people harassed for how they identify

The paper clip is a digital stand-in for a safety pin, which doesn't have an emoji yet. The safety pin is a way to show solidarity to victims of hate crimes and harassment. People wore pins post-Brexit and in the aftermath of the Trump election. This is the digital equivalent to show you are an ally.

@sashajol It's a substitute for a safety pin emoji (which AFAIK doesn't exist) to express solidarity with groups marginalized by the current admin.

— RobotWithHumanHair 📎 (@edicius) April 13, 2017

Note the pre-announcement of his announcement - it’s like a reality TV show setup. Game show president. Infotec driver.

— Jough Dempsey 📎✊️ (@jough) June 1, 2017

We all awake from marching? Time for step 2. Call your reps. Write letters. Donate to local and national orgs, if you can. Don't. Stop. Now.

— ((IsaacRosenthal))📎 (@IsaacMRosenthal) January 22, 2017

🌏 Globe 🌏

Meaning: Globalist

Trump's anti-establishment attitudes (we can't forget about #DrainTheSwamp) have given rise to the derogatory term 'globalist.' It's based off an anti-Semitic term that apparently Steve Bannon has called Jared Kushner. The term comes from the conspiracy theory that Jewish people maintain financial control of the global economy. Trump supporters use 'globalist' as a term of derision toward anyone they consider privileged elites, from both sides of the aisle.

Vox made a list of who usually gets slapped with the 'globalist' label: 'Most bankers, executives of multinational corporations, pre-Trump political leaders and donors in both parties, think tank staffers, intellectuals, and members of the media, all generally concentrated in cities, usually get the label too.'

You'll see it online when people take back the term to ruin the intended effect. So like using a snowflake to minimize the power of the insult, the globe does the same thing for Jewish people and others proud of their political ideology and social status, usually more progressive liberals.

spot on liam. the people vs privilege election. https://t.co/JvoXBJTzeh

— Peter Craven 🌎🌹 (@FALLLFAN) June 1, 2017

So many emoji

Semiotician Michael Mills, an administrator at SUNY Geneseo has found the use of emoji to mean something more in our online names. 'It's a way of expressing individuality,' he said in a phone call.

Your handle now represents a larger idea, which Mills said makes people feel included and part of the group. For ambiguous emoji, like a paperclip which has a more nuanced meaning beyond holding paper together, anyone who uses it feels like they are in on the 'joke,' or 'real' meaning.

Twitter doesn't seem alarmed by the hidden meanings in people's handles. The social media company said that as long as the name follows community guidelines all is well. If things cross over into 'hateful conduct' then they will intervene. But if Twitter doesn't know what an emoji really means, it's hard to prove it's hateful.

Sometimes someone just really likes cats, dogs, lightning bolts, and flowers. Or like with the frog image behind the Pepe phenomenon, an emoji becomes something politically charged for no real rhyme or reason. In fact, the frog emoji is cropping up again in recent weeks as something of a Pepe revival.

Twitter Emoji

Emoji in handles aren't going away anytime soon. Trust sound cards & media devices driver download for windows 10.