![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() SwiftKey also notes that the frequency of any individual emoji is small as there are more than 800 emojis for users to select. It includes both Android and iOS devices. The findings in its report come from an analysis of aggregate SwiftKey Cloud data ( an opt in service which backs up and syncs language insights across devices) over a four-month period between October 2014 and January 2015. For Russian users ‘cold weather’ emojis such as snowflake are among the most used. Unsurprisingly, more niche choices such as ocean creatures, outer space and tools are among the least used categories.Īnalysis of the categories by language throws up some rather cliché conclusions: ‘party’ emojis are top for Spanish users while the ‘hearts’ and ‘wedding’ categories are the category leaders for the French while ‘mammals’, ‘alcohol’ and ‘junk food’ categories are among the top for Australian English users. Grouped into categories, the results show that happy faces are the most used emoji category, followed by sad faces and hearts. Overall, six of the most popular emoji choices fall within Swiftkey’s ‘happy smileys category’. Swiftkey have also ranked the emoji’s more broadly by category. For Turkish users the smiling face with open mouth and smiling eyes was a firm favourite instead. For users of the US Spanish, Spanish and Latin American language setting, the face throwing a kiss emoji was the go-to. Hearts seem to be the most popular for French users with the heavy black heart emoji and sparkling heart the top two choices, followed by the face with tears of joy. Emoji How often each emoji is used out of all emoji usage. ![]()
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