HERE’S plenty of things that show your age – music taste, clothes and joint suppleness.
But it seems emojis also reveal which generation you belong to.
A new survey found that people over 30 were far more likely to add a tick or a love heart to a social media message than youngsters.
They also use the poo sign, crying face and clapping hands literally. The etiquette for sending out the icons is increasingly confusing, with Generation Z – those born from the mid-1990s onwards – even sometimes taking offence at the classic OK hand or thumbs up.
Here, Emil Rollings, 15, offers his guide to the emoji minefield.
READ MORE ON EMOJIS
Poo sign: No one I know has ever used this one because it looks really childish.
Lipstick kiss: I have never sent it within my social circle and we’d view it as overly-romantic.
Monkey eye-cover: My friends and I don’t put this symbol in messages. I don’t even know what it means.
Love heart: A romantic sign that would only be used in a jokey way and certainly isn’t put at the end of general conversations.
Tick: I don’t see why I should be offended by this sign of approval, but it’s definitely not anything my friends use.
Blue baseball cap: This usually means that someone is lying as it was first used in response to Donald Trump claiming he’d won the 2016 US presidential election. Frequently employed.
Clown: It is a popular way to say that someone has done something dumb, but I don’t use it that much.
Crying with laughter: This is a swift way to tell your friends that what they have posted is funny, and is often used.
Skull: If you want to show that a joke has you doubled up, the skull is often the preferred option.
Frozen face: A popular symbol for saying that you think something is cool.
Hands clapping: The meaning can be passive-aggressive because it is increasingly used in an ironic manner. As always, Context is everything.
A quick way to indicate you are okay with a plan, but some people take offence at it[/caption]Thumbs up: Lots of friends still use the thumbs up because it is a quick way to indicate you are okay with a plan, but some people take offence at it.
Gritted teeth: Young people do send this to say, ‘Why has someone done that?’, but it could be seen as an insult.
Drooling: Okay if you are discussing a burger you’re about to eat, but it would be odd if used in relation to a person.
OK hand: The survey might say that this emoji is out of fashion, but it does appear in our message groups, although it can be used sarcastically.
Read More on The Sun
Hot face: Be careful if you are thinking of using it to say the weather is sweltering because young people will take it to mean the person or thing is “hot”.
Water droplets: You shouldn’t use this emoji to indicate rain or water because it has sexual connotations.