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Where to use infographics?

Posted: Wed Jan 08, 2025 3:24 am
by mehjabins
If Emoji (but also emoticons) were initially created to compensate for a “shortcoming”, that is, to transfer communication from “face to face” to the “dark”, via the screen of a device, today this is no longer their function. Making up for the lack of facial expression, tone of voice and gestures, to give different nuances to the same sentence (ironic, angry, directed at something or someone in particular...), is not in fact as necessary for generations that were born in the midst of current technology.


Therefore, both at a generational and cultural level, different benin number data meanings - or shades of meaning - can or could be associated with the same Emoji, depending on the context or following any specific historical events. Example: Boomers = death – Generation Z = I'm dying of laughter If the generation gap affects the way we communicate, perceive and understand, obviously the cultural gap not only does the same, but much more! At this point we wouldn't just be talking about Emojis, obviously, but in general about lifestyle, culture, value scales and so on.


.. If the dictionary is always open to changes or additions, the web is even more so, obviously! To get to the point and for some more concrete examples, I will pass the word to my colleague Lucia, who in addition to being an excellent copywriter is also the mother of 2 teenagers. Emojis for Teens (Today…) As Federica has correctly written so far, emojis are still widely used today even by Generation Z , the young people born between 1995 and 2010.