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This is a list of emoticons or textual portrayals of a writer's moods or facial expressions in the form of icons. Originally, these icons consisted of ASCII art, and later, Shift JIS art and Unicode art. In recent times, graphical icons, both static and animated, have joined the traditional text-based emoticons; these are commonly known as ...
Shift_JIS art. Shift_JIS art is artwork created from characters in the Shift JIS character set, a superset of the ASCII encoding standard intended for Japanese usage. Shift_JIS art has become popular on web-based bulletin boards, notably 2channel, and has even made its way into mainstream media and commercial advertising in Japan.
An emoticon (/ əˈmoʊtəkɒn /, ə-MOH-tə-kon, rarely / ɪˈmɒtɪkɒn /, ih-MOTT-ih-kon), [1][2][3][4] short for emotion icon, [5] is a pictorial representation of a facial expression using characters —usually punctuation marks, numbers and letters —to express a person's feelings, mood or reaction, without needing to describe it in detail.
Microsoft displayed all Mahjong tiles (U+1F000‥2B, not just U+1F004 🀄 MAHJONG TILE RED DRAGON) and alternative card suits (U+2661 ♡ WHITE HEART SUIT, U+2662 ♢ WHITE DIAMOND SUIT, U+2664 ♤ WHITE SPADE SUIT, U+2667 ♧ WHITE CLUB SUIT) as emoji. They also supported additional pencils (U+270E LOWER RIGHT PENCIL, U+2710 UPPER RIGHT ...
3 2channel emoticons. 4 Graphic emoticons. 5 Unicode characters. 6 References. ... The emoticon in Western style is written most often from left to right. Thus, most ...
5channel5ちゃんねる. 2channel (Japanese: 2ちゃんねる, Hepburn: ni channeru), also known as 2ch, [5] Channel 2, [6][7] and sometimes retrospectively as 2ch.net, [8] was an anonymous Japanese textboard [b] founded in 1999 by Hiroyuki Nishimura. Described in 2007 as "Japan's most popular online community", [9] the site had a level of ...
Template:Emote [edit] 😀 This template is meant to allow people to conveniently use the Unicode emoticons. It is used by using { {emote|xxx}}, where "xxx" includes the unicode number or text shortcut. The names from the mouseover text above work if used directly, and usually if condensed to a key word ("grinning" or "unamused" for example ...
Western or Eastern emoticons, when really they're a very small subset of the latter. Anyway, the main problem is whether they're sourced. I don't think anyone has a problem putting any emoticons they use on 2channel in the list as long as they're properly sourced. — Bility 10:03, 29 December 2011 (UTC)