148 lines
6.6 KiB
Markdown
148 lines
6.6 KiB
Markdown
|
---
|
|||
|
title: Emoji is not a Language
|
|||
|
date: 2021-07-14
|
|||
|
tags:
|
|||
|
- linguistics
|
|||
|
- philosophy
|
|||
|
---
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
What is a language? This is something that is surprisingly controversial.
|
|||
|
There's some easy ways to tell when something is a language (one of them being
|
|||
|
that they have an army), but what about things like emoji? Is emoji a language?
|
|||
|
In this article I will attempt to argue that emoji is not a language unto
|
|||
|
itself.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
At a high level, language is a tool that we use to represent
|
|||
|
spatial/temporal/conceptual relations between objects/ideas/things, statements
|
|||
|
about reality and similar things among that nature. Many languages are broken
|
|||
|
into units of meaning that we call words. Here are some example words:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
- the
|
|||
|
- taco
|
|||
|
- is
|
|||
|
- beautiful
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
We can break these words into two basic classes like this:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
| Content | Grammar |
|
|||
|
| :------- | :------- |
|
|||
|
| taco | the |
|
|||
|
| beautiful | is |
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It's worth noting that not all verbs fall into the "grammar" category. Things
|
|||
|
like "eat" would fall into a content word, however "is" is a special case
|
|||
|
because it is directly drawing a relation between two things. In the sentence
|
|||
|
"The taco is beautiful", there is a relation being made from one specific taco
|
|||
|
and the abstract concept of beauty.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I want to argue that emoji has plenty of content words, but no grammar words. If
|
|||
|
we wanted to assemble an analog to "The taco is beautiful" in emoji, we could
|
|||
|
make 1:1 correlations between English words and emoji like this:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
| English | Emoji |
|
|||
|
|:------- |:----- |
|
|||
|
| the | |
|
|||
|
| taco | 🌮 |
|
|||
|
| is | |
|
|||
|
| beautiful | 🎀 |
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I dug through the entire emoji chart and was unable to find things that could be
|
|||
|
used for "the" and "is". Heck, even the word I used for "beautiful" was a
|
|||
|
stretch because the ribbon emoji is normally used that way. Is a language
|
|||
|
defined by words that have inherent meaning or is that meaning arbitrarily
|
|||
|
assigned by its users? Can I just firng out words like "xnoypt" as in "realizing
|
|||
|
how the word would be pronounced, Tom [xnoypted](https://youtu.be/aMgCBYgVwsI)
|
|||
|
out of existence"? Does that mean "xnoypt" is a word?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The closest I was able to get to "the" and "is" would be metaphors that would
|
|||
|
fall apart when you want to discuss the actual things involved. Let's say that
|
|||
|
you assign arbitrary emoji at least to "is" so that you can end up with this
|
|||
|
sentence in emoji:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
🌮➡️🎀
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
What if you want to talk about the concept of right though? Say you want to
|
|||
|
convey that the taco store is to the right of the office building. You'd need to
|
|||
|
say something like:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
🌮🏪➡️➡️🏢
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
And this could be easily confused with the interpretation "taco store right
|
|||
|
right office building".
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
But how do you know that it's a taco store? That's just a convention English
|
|||
|
follows where the thing being described is the right-most thing and other things
|
|||
|
on the left are just qualifiers or determiners to what's going on about it. It's
|
|||
|
a "taco store", not a "store taco". Other languages like French do have this
|
|||
|
reversed, so it could easily become a source of confusion.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
So what if you ripped out the grammar entirely? What if you just had something
|
|||
|
that was pure content? Could utterances like "🌮🏪➡️🏢" function in place of
|
|||
|
something that breaks apart the words into groups? How would people know the
|
|||
|
difference between that being a giant list of descriptors on top of a taco or an
|
|||
|
office building?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
How would you express verbs like "to eat"? Emojipedia says that 🍴 is used to
|
|||
|
signify eating, but what about cultures that don't use cutlery to eat with?
|
|||
|
Would this really be global enough to work in places like China? Cultural
|
|||
|
cross-contamination would likely be enough at this point that most people could
|
|||
|
get the message, but is this really representing the idea of eating or the idea
|
|||
|
of something that you can use to eat other things? Would using this mean that
|
|||
|
you could express what you ate with emoji? What would make it more of a concept
|
|||
|
of eating than "to eat", "mangxi" (Esperanto), "manger" (French), or "citka"
|
|||
|
(Lojban)?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If language is a tool that we can use to describe relations, then we can sorta
|
|||
|
get them across with emoji by piggy-backing on top of the grammar of other
|
|||
|
languages. You can derive new words like "taco store" with phrases like "🌮🏪".
|
|||
|
You can use these to create meaning, I guess, but it wouldn't be very precise.
|
|||
|
You could get across the most common words and cultural ideas, but not much
|
|||
|
else.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Certainly not technical things where detail is important. Where is that taco
|
|||
|
store in relation to the office building? Is it 5 meters to the right of it or
|
|||
|
500 meters? What color is the office building? What name does it have? What is
|
|||
|
the name of the road? What is the name of the taco store?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
What can you really convey with emoji that isn't also conveyed with words?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
You can create new words easily with some chat platforms and how they use emoji
|
|||
|
though. You can either describe "nonbinary people" as "🚫🔢0️1️🧍" or you can just
|
|||
|
upload an image of the [nonbinary pride
|
|||
|
flag](https://gender.wikia.org/wiki/Pride_Flags#Nonbinary_Flag) to use as a
|
|||
|
direct descriptor of the concept instead. In a way emoji gives you a level of
|
|||
|
freedom of expression that simple words can't. The word "xnoypt" makes sense to
|
|||
|
people that know the word, but the picture has a greater chance of being closer
|
|||
|
to understood on its own. Here is an emoji that my coworkers use as a loving
|
|||
|
description:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<center>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
![](https://cdn.christine.website/file/christine-static/blog/friday_deploy.png)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
</center>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This one is called `friday_deploy` and is used as the avatar of our deployment
|
|||
|
bot as well as a way to describe the abstract horror of deploying software on a
|
|||
|
Friday. By being an emoji it can represent something more than just the
|
|||
|
pictograph that it is.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
These all certainly encode meaning on their own, but meaning on its own doesn't
|
|||
|
make a language. Emoji certainly could become a language, but it would need a
|
|||
|
lot of work to become one. Even then it would likely fall into the other
|
|||
|
failings that International Auxiliary Languages that have fell into. It is
|
|||
|
easier to type emoji than it is to type things like Esperanto's "ĉ", but it's
|
|||
|
going to inherently encode assumptions in the creator's first language.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Emoji is not a language, it's used to augment existing languages.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
> If you want to claim that emoji is a language, you should be able to make that
|
|||
|
> same claim using emoji. Not an ad hoc cypher of the english sentence; just use
|
|||
|
> emoji the way people commonly use them, which you're saying counts as a
|
|||
|
> language, to say "Emoji is a language".
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
- allthingslinguistic
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I'd be willing to be proven wrong if you can write "Emoji is a language"
|
|||
|
unambiguously using emoji without it being a baroque cipher of English.
|