![]() ![]() Used as an icon or like any other clipart graphics. While this graphic is technically an emoji, it can be (for example, a link back to their website). The license to see if the designer is requesting attribution This emoji can be used for both Personal &Ĭommercial purposes and projects, but please check Converting it to an ICO, JPEG or WebP image format or file type should also be pretty simple (we hope to add that feature to Iconduck soon). If you need this emoji available in another format, it should be pretty straight forward to download it as an SVG image file, and then import it into apps like Adobe Illustrator, Canva, Pablo or Stencil. It's part of the emoji set " Noto Emoji by Google", which has 3,670 emojis in it. ![]() However, you can also upload your own templates or start from scratch with empty templates. People often use the generator to customize established memes, such as those found in Imgflips collection of Meme Templates. It's available to be downloaded in SVG and PNG formats (available in 256, 512, 10 PNG sizes). Its a free online image maker that lets you add custom resizable text, images, and much more to templates. ![]() It's also a defined emoji, which means it's part of the open standard on emojis. The word equivalent I think best describes it is “message received.This open source emoji is named "thumbs up" and is licensed under the open source Apache 2.0 license. Nothing else.ĭoes that make sense? For us it feels like we’re *really* putting in effort to make them feel seen/loved/not lonely and they are like “Christ be less desperate.” Like we have teenage elders, hahah! And it doesn’t have to be a sign off – it could be like, a message wishing them a happy birthday or a happy Halloween or whatever - the point is, the thumbs up emoji comes off like the other person is just *way too much* and you really wish they would eff off. The response is an effing thumbs up emoji. Really looking forward to it – love you!” It doesn’t help that the two worst offenders are one each of our closest living relatives left (his father, my grandmother) – my grandmother has been texting for over 20 years so don’t give her a break! But say they text about what they are doing, we’ll text back a response and ask when would be a good time to chat, they will text back something like “tomorrow afternoon should be fine, but also Wednesday or Thursday.” And we’ll respond with the equivalent of, “okay great! Call you around 4 tomorrow if that’s okay. For us it has nothing to do with being cool or uncool, and *everything* to do with passive-aggressiveness. I feel like I left the womb mid-life but I’m an elder-ish Millennial, and I HATE the thumbs up emoji – so does my husband (who, conveniently, also seemed to leave the womb as a middle aged man). This is where I’d put a thumbs up emoji but I literally don’t know how to do that in wordpress and Hailey isn’t home to help me so I texted them for feedback: Victor: What if I’m ironically pretending to be Fonzie? Me: Just to be safe? I’d say only if you’re Fonzie. Me: Eggplant emoji did not make the list. Apparently we’re also supposed to stop using thumbs-up, okay fingers, kissy face, red hearts… The thumbs-up reaction is blue and is attached to the person’s text bubble. Me: The thumbs-up emoji is yellow and stand alone. But we’re Gen X so I guess we’re not supposed to? But I don’t know if I’m still cool because I never use the thumbs-up emoji but I’m always using the thumbs-up reaction and I don’t know if that’s different. Me: According to the internet Gen Z finds the thumbs up emoji passive-aggressive and hostile, but Gen X uses it all the time because they don’t understand. Victor: I don’t even know what that means but it sounds like something I already don’t do. Me: So apparently we’re supposed to stop thumbs-up emojying young people at work. ![]()
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