What are the most used emojis in the world?
Around 92% of the worldβs online population use emojis, according to the Unicode Consortium.
Being not a universal language, some of the 3,663 emojis appear far more often than others.
The crossword-Solver team analyzed 9 million geotagged tweets to see which emoji each country uses the most.
They turned this data, retrieved during the last two weeks of February 2022, into maps of the world to chart emoji usage across the globe.
Key Findings:
βοΈ Most countries are either laughing or loving as face with tears of joy π and red heart β€οΈ are the first and second most used emojis worldwide.
βοΈ Face with tears of joy π is the most common emoji in 75 countries.
βοΈWordle-themed emojis π© π¨ β¬οΈ find their way into top ten most-used emojis in many Anglo-Saxon countries.
βοΈEmojis are not a universal language. In China the clapping hands emoji π suggests "making love", while sending thumbs upπ to a Greek may cause offence.
@OreosSpace
Around 92% of the worldβs online population use emojis, according to the Unicode Consortium.
Being not a universal language, some of the 3,663 emojis appear far more often than others.
The crossword-Solver team analyzed 9 million geotagged tweets to see which emoji each country uses the most.
They turned this data, retrieved during the last two weeks of February 2022, into maps of the world to chart emoji usage across the globe.
Key Findings:
βοΈ Most countries are either laughing or loving as face with tears of joy π and red heart β€οΈ are the first and second most used emojis worldwide.
βοΈ Face with tears of joy π is the most common emoji in 75 countries.
βοΈWordle-themed emojis π© π¨ β¬οΈ find their way into top ten most-used emojis in many Anglo-Saxon countries.
βοΈEmojis are not a universal language. In China the clapping hands emoji π suggests "making love", while sending thumbs upπ to a Greek may cause offence.
@OreosSpace
π6π±3
The guy in this picture is 6'3" (191 cm) and that girl is 4'11" (150 cm) tall. People often think about their partners height. But look at this Happy couple β€οΈβοΈ
@OreosSpace
@OreosSpace
β€6
This is an unusual flower. It stays smell less in day time but spread beautiful smell at night. Do any of you know itβs name?
@OreosSpace
@OreosSpace
β€4π€3π₯1
Who is the worldβs oldest living land animal?
π’His name is Jonathan, and he's a Seychelles giant tortoise (Aldabrachelys gigantea hololissa).
Jonathan is estimated to have been born in 1832, which means he turned, or turns, 190 years old in 2022.
This 190-year-old tortoise is in combination the oldest tortoise ever beating the previous record of Tu'i Malila, a radiated tortoise (Astrochelys radiata) that lived to at least 188 years old before dying in 1965.
βοΈJonathan lives on St. Helena, an island in the South Atlantic Ocean, where he arrived in 1882 when he was about 50 years old.
βΌοΈA photograph of Jonathan dated between 1882 and 1886 shows him fully grown, which suggests he was at least 50 years old when it was taken, so he could be older than 190 years today.
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π’His name is Jonathan, and he's a Seychelles giant tortoise (Aldabrachelys gigantea hololissa).
Jonathan is estimated to have been born in 1832, which means he turned, or turns, 190 years old in 2022.
This 190-year-old tortoise is in combination the oldest tortoise ever beating the previous record of Tu'i Malila, a radiated tortoise (Astrochelys radiata) that lived to at least 188 years old before dying in 1965.
βοΈJonathan lives on St. Helena, an island in the South Atlantic Ocean, where he arrived in 1882 when he was about 50 years old.
βΌοΈA photograph of Jonathan dated between 1882 and 1886 shows him fully grown, which suggests he was at least 50 years old when it was taken, so he could be older than 190 years today.
Subscribe- t.me/OreosSpace
π±9
Have you even seen a White Crow? Here's a few pictures of this rare creature.
Crows with white plumage are very rare in nature, as their colour is due to a rather rare mutation, albinism.
π₯ @OreosSpace
Crows with white plumage are very rare in nature, as their colour is due to a rather rare mutation, albinism.
π₯ @OreosSpace
π₯7π±5π2
A few days ago I posted about the oldest animal ever lived on land (recorded) which was a Turtle. Now,
What animals live longer than turtles?
There are at least two animals who can live longer than π’.
The first one is Hydra, belonging to a group of symmetrical invertebrates that includes also jellyfish, sea anemones and corals. The hydra is best-known for its unusual ability to continually regenerate parts of its body, making the creature biologically immortal.
Among vertebrates, itβs the Greenland shark (Somniosus microcephalus)π¦ who has an estimated maximum life span of 272 years.
Greenland sharks live in deep waters of the Arctic and North Atlantic oceans.
Growing very slowly, they can reach up to 7.3 meters long (24 feet).
The exact life span of these longest-living animals with a backbone is in fact unknown. The estimations of their age made by researchers had a margin of error of some 120 years. So it is not excluded that some sharks can live even longer than three centuries.
π» @OreosSpace
What animals live longer than turtles?
There are at least two animals who can live longer than π’.
The first one is Hydra, belonging to a group of symmetrical invertebrates that includes also jellyfish, sea anemones and corals. The hydra is best-known for its unusual ability to continually regenerate parts of its body, making the creature biologically immortal.
Among vertebrates, itβs the Greenland shark (Somniosus microcephalus)π¦ who has an estimated maximum life span of 272 years.
Greenland sharks live in deep waters of the Arctic and North Atlantic oceans.
Growing very slowly, they can reach up to 7.3 meters long (24 feet).
The exact life span of these longest-living animals with a backbone is in fact unknown. The estimations of their age made by researchers had a margin of error of some 120 years. So it is not excluded that some sharks can live even longer than three centuries.
π» @OreosSpace
π±6π€3π₯1
