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The first ever emoticon was recorded in September 1982.

But who decided to digitalise the smiley face in the first place? How did emoticons evolve into emojis we use today?

Here are six things you might not know about emoticons.

The emoticon was invented by a computer scientist

Scott Fahlman, programmer and retired professor at Carnegie Mellon University, was the first documented person to use the emoticons :-) and :-( when proposing the sequence of characters to mark when you鈥檙e joking (or not joking), as tone can be difficult to distinguish over text.

Prof Fahlman posted the 鈥榮ideways smiley鈥 onto an online computer science board at the university, and others contributed to the thread. Emoticons then reached world-wide discussion systems such as Usenet - similar to what we would now call an internet forum.

Emoticons and emojis are not the same

An emoticon is a blend of 鈥榚motion鈥 and 鈥榠con鈥, made up of characters from a keyboard, whereas an emoji (a combination of the Japanese 鈥榚鈥 for 鈥榩icture鈥 and 鈥榤oji鈥 for 鈥榗haracter鈥) is small image that represents something.

The first emojis were created by Shigetaka Kurita in Japan in 1999 for mobile phones, in order for users to communicate simple messages quickly and efficiently through icons.

Emojis were eventually incorporated into corporate email and messaging systems all over the world - but Apple has often been credited for popularising emojis globally, as the iPhone introduced their own emoji keyboard and competing phone companies followed suit.

Shigetaka Kurita holding some emoji drawings
Image caption,
Shigetaka Kurita holding drawings of some original 12x12 pixel emoji designs.

The smiley came first

The iconic yellow smiley face has an interesting story behind it - and it was around long before the emoticon. In 1963, comic artist and graphic designer Harvey Ball was commissioned by an insurance company in Worcester, Massachusetts, to promote their happy image with the phrase "Have a happy day" (later 鈥淗ave a nice day鈥 - which is still a slogan for smiley t-shirts now).

The design took less than 10 minutes, but it exploded in western pop culture, being referenced in music, film and art.

It even became a symbol of UK rave culture in the 80鈥檚 and 90鈥檚 - however, the authentic 鈥榃orcester-made鈥 smiley by Harvey Ball has signature differences, such as the right eye being larger than the left, and the thickness and angle of the mouth.

But Harvey didn't copyright his design, so missed out on the millions that his design generated throughout the decades :(

A set of Hieroglyphics and their related sounds.
Image caption,
Hieroglyphics and their related sounds.

Modern-day Hieroglyphics?

You might have heard emojis being compared to Hieroglyphics, but this isn鈥檛 entirely accurate.

Hieroglyphs are logograms - characters that represent words or phrases - and emojis are pictograms, which are pictures of the things they represent.

A single Hieroglyph can mean many things depending on the context in which it is written, or what symbols it is paired with - but while these would be understood as a language, emoji combinations are largely subject to interpretation. What do you mean broccoli-broccoli-crying face?

However the 鈥榬ubus priciple鈥, where a symbol for one word is used to stand in for a word with a similar sound - similar to a system that middle Egyptian also used - can apply to emojis. E.g. the phrase 鈥榦h dear鈥 could be written as 鈥榦h (deer emoji)鈥, which is perhaps why emojis are confused for modern Hieroglyphics.

A set of Hieroglyphics and their related sounds.
Image caption,
Hieroglyphics and their related sounds.
A smiling mouth.
Image caption,
*Smiles in Russian*

They鈥檙e not the same in every language

Did you know different countries recognise different emoticons? Some languages require different characters and have a different keyboard, so it makes sense that the emoticons they 鈥榮pell out鈥 have some variation.

In Russia, the colon punctuation mark is not used on the Russian keyboard, so ) is enough to show happiness, or ))) for extreme happiness.

Japanese emoticons are called 鈥榢aomojis鈥 from 鈥榢ao鈥 (meaning 鈥榝ace鈥) + moji. Kaomojis use the kanji keyboard and have a larger range of expression in the eyes than the western emoticon - for example, evil eyes go inward (锝赌蝇麓) and kind eyes go outward (麓鈻斤絸). Japanese emojis in the 1990s were inspired by kaomojis - so really the evolution was not down to smiley emoticons, but kaomojis!

Other countries utilise accents and characters in their keyboards to create more complex emoticons, e.g. Korean emoticons 銋囥厖銋 and Brazilian emoticons 貌冲贸.

If you frequent internet forums, you may have seen a melting pot of emoticons in eastern upright style, but using English language keyboards: e.g. T_T for a crying face.

But their meanings can also differ across cultures. For example, >.< is a cute face in South Korea, but an angry face in Hungary - be careful who you鈥檙e sending them to!

A smiling mouth.
Image caption,
*Smiles in Russian*
Transcript of Abraham Lincoln's speech
Image caption,
Transcript of president Lincoln's speech - deliberate or a cheeky typo?

They might have existed before the digital age

There is some evidence that emoticons are far older than the sideways smiley. While it is debated whether it was deliberate or a typo, the first emoticon in print may have been inserted into a transcript of an 1862 speech by US president Abraham Lincoln.

The transcript featured a parenthesis 鈥(applause and laughter ;)鈥, and it鈥檚 an unresolved argument that the use of a winky face ;) was to signify humour, or was simply a mistake or misinterpretation of a grammatical symbol of that era.

Transcript of Abraham Lincoln's speech
Image caption,
Transcript of president Lincoln's speech - deliberate or a cheeky typo?
Signature with a face drawn next to it.
Image caption,
Hebbot's signature self-portrait may not be representative of what he actually looked like.

Smiley faces have also been documented elsewhere through out history, such as on the signature of Bernard Hebbot - an abbot from 1761 Cistercian cloister (now Czech Republic) - who drew a smiley-like drawing next to his name. Paintings and carvings of the smiley face have been seen on pots as far back as the 1700s.

However, it is widely accepted that Fahlman鈥檚 digital sideways smiley is the face that started it all.

Signature with a face drawn next to it.
Image caption,
Hebbot's signature self-portrait may not be representative of what he actually looked like.

大象传媒 Ideas looks at the history of emoticons... it goes back further than you think :-)

Was this the first emoticon?

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