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"The emoji diet has had me eating more seafood and fresh fruit, which I welcome as healthy additions," Rexroat wrote in The Atlantic. "This diet is essentially the opposite of Atkins.
Like sushi, emoji as both word and idea was loaned to U.S. English from Japanese. Emoji, in fact, are one of the few technologies that managed to start in Japan’s peculiar smartphone market and ...
Authorities in Queensland, Australia, recently announced that they will be adding an emoji option for license plate personalization. Personalized Plates Queensland (PPQ) is currently taking ...
We’ve reached a new level of descent into the world of emoji-based interactions. Starting March 1 of this year, drivers in Queensland, Australia will be able to personalize their license plates ...
In 2019, Queensland, Australia, became one of the first places in the world to allow emoji on license plates. The five emoji allowed in the jurisdiction include the laughing, smiling, winking ...
What was unexpected, though, and so apparent in the LA Taco rant, is that we now look at the taco emoji in the same way we did a lack of same sex relationships or racially diversity in our emoji.
Lawmakers in Vermont are debating whether to let motorists request a license plate with an emoji on it. The bill that could put smiley faces on thousands of custom and state-issued plates hasn’t ...
As of 2019, drivers in Queensland, Australia, can place laughing, smiling, winking, "love," or sunglasses emoji on their plates, which are priced at around $336 each. No word on how much the ...
Emojis already light up text messages, social media, advertisements, even a movie. Now they’re about to hit Australian roads. From March 1, drivers in the state of Queensland can personalize ...
If a personalised number plate simply isn't enough to express your complex personality, worry not - soon you will be able to add an emoji to the mix. Ok, you'll have to move to Queensland ...
A German triathlete has been banned from an all-you-can-eat sushi restaurant in Bavaria after eating a little too much — to the tune of nearly 100 plates of food.
Emojis already light up text messages, social media, advertisements, even a movie. Now they’re about to hit Australian roads. From March 1, drivers in the state of Queensland can personalize ...