@[email protected] to Ask [email protected] • 6 months agoWhat is your favourite fact?message-square107fedilinkarrow-up175
arrow-up175message-squareWhat is your favourite fact?@[email protected] to Ask [email protected] • 6 months agomessage-square107fedilink
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink19•6 months agoEmoticon :) has etymology stemming from emotion + icon. Tis from the 80s, early computer stuff Emoji 😊 is japanese, from 絵文字 which is like, drawing + character, basically. It’s a word MUCH older than computing. False cognates. Sound similar, similar function, nothing to do with each other.
minus-squareLousyCornMuffinslinkfedilinkEnglish8•6 months agoThere’s a :) in a typewritten cookbook I have from the 40s. I don’t know how widespread smileys were back then, but they existed.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink5•6 months agoMy favourite false cognate is the plural ending -s in French and English. The English one has Germanic roots, while the French one come from Latin accusative plural -as/-os. They are unrelated etymologically.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink4•6 months agoAfter looking it up I have to correct myself, the Germanic plural - s also come from the accusative plural
Emoticon :) has etymology stemming from emotion + icon. Tis from the 80s, early computer stuff
Emoji 😊 is japanese, from 絵文字 which is like, drawing + character, basically. It’s a word MUCH older than computing.
False cognates. Sound similar, similar function, nothing to do with each other.
There’s a :) in a typewritten cookbook I have from the 40s. I don’t know how widespread smileys were back then, but they existed.
My favourite false cognate is the plural ending -s in French and English. The English one has Germanic roots, while the French one come from Latin accusative plural -as/-os. They are unrelated etymologically.
After looking it up I have to correct myself, the Germanic plural - s also come from the accusative plural