💬 The emoji speech bubble

The emoji speech bubble began to appear in large printed pages of the 18th century, and political cartoons of the American Revolution (some published by Benjamin Franklin) used them often - as did cartoonist James Gillray on the other side. of the Atlantic. By 1900, American comics had started using speech bubbles instead of extended text captions (which comic book artist Lew Stringer says were deployed in order to convince parents that the comics had a certain literary merit). The Yellow Kid, published in the New York Journal and considered the first real newspaper strip, cemented the speech bubble in the panel, making the comic easier to read and the scene more immediate. Words were now part of the action. Today we instinctively understand and use all of these modern hieroglyphics: cloud-shaped bubbles to indicate thought, "Z" to indicate sleep, jagged bubbles to indicate screams, "!" for the surprise, jagged tails for the voices coming out of the radio or television, a bulb for the realization, a musical note for the song. It's a shorthand that's coming in more and more useful in this age of texts and tweets - but if we can't thank The Dandy for inventing it, we can at least thank them for taking the idea away from them. Americans and transporting it across the Atlantic.

Copy and paste β†’ 💬

The emoji speech bubble Unicode 6.0 in 2010 and Emoji 1.0 in 2015.

Code point (s) Unicode
💬: U+1F4AC

💬 Images | Photos

Google

Android 9.0 Pie

Google (Android 9.0 Pie)
Twitter

Twemoji 11.1

Twitter (Twemoji 11.1)
Twitter

Twemoji 2.3

Twitter (Twemoji 2.3)
Mozilla

FxEmojis 1.7.9

Mozilla (Firefox OS 2.5)
Google

Android 7.1.1
Nougat

Google (Android 7.1.1 Nougat)

💬 Codes

Shortcode :speech_balloon:
Decimal HTML Entity 💬
Hexadecimal HTML Entity 💬
Punycode xn--os8h
URL Escape Code %F0%9F%92%AC
JavaScript & JSON \uD83D\uDCAC
C, C++ & Java \U0001f4ac


What does the emoji speech bubble mean?

The emoji speech bubble Graphic element drawn from comics widely used to convey messages in all forms of postings, including websites. The balloon is a text-filled bubble that points to a human-like person or object. Also called "speech bubbles", "speech bubbles", "word bubbles" and "text bubbles". The emoji speech bubble has drawn from comics widely used to convey messages in all forms of publications including websites. The balloon is a text-filled bubble that points to a human-like person or object. Also known as "speech bubbles", "speech bubbles", "word bubbles" and "text bubbles". I used to think bubbles were created when the first comics came out, but after doing some research I was surprised to find that it was somewhat present in early civilizations as a symbolic image of the speech. It's a shorthand that's coming in more and more useful in this age of texts and tweets - but if we can't thank The Dandy for inventing it, we can at least thank them for taking the idea away from them. Americans and transporting it across the Atlantic.

When to use the emoji speech bubble?

The emoji speech bubble is used in its latest spotlight on comic book notable premieres, CSBG delves into the history of speech bubbles and think balloons in comics. Also use it as a synonym for the word "say". For example: when your friend doesn't want to say something. Send him this emoji, which means, "say it already!" Or use it as a way to show dialogue between 2 people; or conversation in general. If a president is giving a speech on πŸŽ‰ Independence Day - use the Speech Baloon emoji to tell yourself how good or bad the speech was.

Examples of using an emoji speech bubble in conversations:

  • Did you hear Trump πŸ’¬? Weird!
  • Do you know what it πŸ’¬ πŸ’¬? He loves me!
  • Do not ask! πŸ’¬
  • How to combine emoji speech bubble with kaomojis?

    Kaomojis are popular in Japan for sharing emotions and situations using punctuation and Japanese grammar characters. Like this: (^ _ ^) 〇! You can use this creative style in messengers and the web to impress your friends.

    β€‹πŸ‘‘β€‹πŸ’¬β€‹πŸŽ€β€‹ β€‹πŸ‘¨β€‹πŸ’¬β€‹πŸ΄β€‹ β€‹πŸ‘¨πŸ»β€‹πŸ’¬β€‹πŸ†—β€‹ β€‹πŸ—Όβ€‹πŸ’¬β€‹πŸ‘³πŸ½β€‹πŸ‘²πŸ»β€‹ β€‹πŸ“·β€‹πŸ’¬β€‹πŸ‘»β€‹ ​πŸ‘₯β€‹πŸ§‘β€‹πŸ’¬β€‹πŸ’°β€‹ ​πŸͺβ€‹β˜ŽοΈοΈβ€‹πŸ’΄β€‹πŸ’¬β€‹ β€‹πŸ—Όβ€‹πŸ’¬β€‹πŸ‘²β€‹πŸ‘³β€β™€οΈβ€‹πŸ’‚β€β™‚οΈβ€‹ ​πŸ‘₯β€‹πŸ’¬β€‹πŸ’¬β€‹πŸ’¬β€‹ ​πŸ‘₯β€‹πŸ’¬β€‹ β€‹πŸ‘¨β€πŸ’»β€‹πŸ’¬β€‹πŸ‘©β€πŸ’»β€‹ β€‹πŸ·β€‹πŸ’¬β€‹πŸŽ₯​ β€‹πŸ’¬β€‹πŸ€β€‹ β€‹πŸ“„β€‹πŸ’¬β€‹ β€‹πŸ—Όβ€‹πŸ’¬β€‹πŸ‘³β€‹πŸ‘²β€‹ β€‹πŸ§β€‹πŸ’¬β€‹ ( ^_^)〇 Ζ‘ Ζ° Ι• Ζ™ (β•¬οΎŸβ—₯η›Šβ—€οΎŸ) β•¬οΎŸ