“The Oxford Word of the Year is a word or expression that is judged to reflect the ethos, mood, or preoccupations of the passing year, and have lasting potential as a term of cultural significance.” 我们每年都会公布牛津年度词汇,这些词汇不仅...
1.根据第五段的 Japan made emoji in the 1990s.可知,表情符号这个词来自日本。 2.根据第四段的 The “face with tears of joy” was the world's most used emoji in 2015.可知,在2015年,“脸上有喜悦的泪水”的表情符号是世界上最使用最多的。 3.根据 Young people especially love it.可知,大多数年...
选项中有两项为多余选项The word "emoji" comes from Japanese. literally meaning " picture character". 16 They come in different categories, such as faces and people, plants and animals. and food and drink.When first introduced in Japan in 1999. emojis were limited to 176 simple designs. Now...
For the first time ever, Oxford Dictionaries Word of the year isan emoji. The...Hinckley, Story
Tears of Joy Emoji is Word of the Year 表情符号“哭笑”成年度热词 Oxford Dictionaries has announced that the Word of the Year for 2015 is an emoji rather than a word. The Tears of Joy emoji was the most frequently used emoji this year in the US and the UK according to mobile technol...
Dictionaries have been choosing annual words of the year for, uh,years, but this year, the Oxford University Press partnered with SwiftKey to determine the most popular emoji from around the world. And the Tears of Joy emoji was the winner. The ToJ’s rise has been a quick one: in 2014...
That's why for the first time Oxford Dictionary's Word of the Year is emoji.Emojis are regarded as a new kind of expression ( express). 相关知识点: 试题来源: 解析 答案见上例1:expression介词 of 后应该跟名词作宾语, express 是动词,因此要用其名词形式 expression ...
However, this year they didn’t actually choose a word at all. Instead, they chose a “face with tears(眼泪) of joy” emoji (表情符号). This was the world’s most used emoji in 2015, according to research done by the Oxford University Press. It made up 20 percent of all emojis ...
6.The Oxford dictionary has announced its word of the year.It's spelled…Actually,it isn't spelled at all,because it contains no letters,just a"face with tears of joy"emoji. "The fact that English alone is proving not enough to meet the needs of 21st-century digital communication is a...
The Oxford Dictionary has announced its word of the year. It's spelled... Actually, it isn't spelled at all, because it contains no letters, just a “face with tears of joy emoji.“The fact that English alone is proving not enough to meet the needs of 21