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The semantics of emojis and memes: understanding meaning- making among social media users

There is no doubt that the use of emojis and memes within computer-mediated communication (CMC) on social media platforms like Facebook has become an essential part of how people communicate online (see Thurlow 2018; Thurlow and Jaroski 2020; Barbieri et al 2016; Bai et al 2019 and Thurlow and Dü r...

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Main Author: Francis, Tasneem
Other Authors: Mpendukana, Sibonile
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Linguistics 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Francis, Tasneem
author2 Mpendukana, Sibonile
author_browse Francis, Tasneem
Mpendukana, Sibonile
author_facet Mpendukana, Sibonile
Francis, Tasneem
author_sort Francis, Tasneem
collection Thesis
description There is no doubt that the use of emojis and memes within computer-mediated communication (CMC) on social media platforms like Facebook has become an essential part of how people communicate online (see Thurlow 2018; Thurlow and Jaroski 2020; Barbieri et al 2016; Bai et al 2019 and Thurlow and Dü rscheid 2020). A lot of work has been done to study meaning related to emojis and memes and how they function within communication (see Deumert 2014; Zhu and Ren 2022; Lynch 2022 and Ljubešić and Fišer 2016). This current study advocates for a user-centric approach to understanding meaning- making. The strength of what I am proposing in my research is how to draw an analysis of meaning-making practices linked to the use of emojis and memes within CMC while allowing users to advocate for themselves from their perspectives. This current research unpacked how the average person on Facebook attached meaning to emojis and memes when they are selected and used to communicate online. The goal was to understand whether the meaning attached is shared and universal or if there was room for different modes of expression and meaning-making. The data collected for this research included quantitative survey data and qualitative interview data. Surveys were used as a starting point for conducting one-on-one interviews with a selected number of people who were open to being interviewed after completing the survey. The study concluded that different emojis and memes are used by different people, in different ways, however, the meaning attached to different emojis, and memes become universal over time when it is shared by people. The data provided evidence that universal and shared meaning occurs. However, within the same data, there was evidence to support that even though shared and universal meaning is happening, there is still room for different modes of expression online.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
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last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:31:50.330Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Linguistics
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42290 The semantics of emojis and memes: understanding meaning- making among social media users Francis, Tasneem Mpendukana, Sibonile social media Facebook users emojis memes computer-mediated communication (CMC) meaning-making semiotics multimodality translanguaging surveys and interviews There is no doubt that the use of emojis and memes within computer-mediated communication (CMC) on social media platforms like Facebook has become an essential part of how people communicate online (see Thurlow 2018; Thurlow and Jaroski 2020; Barbieri et al 2016; Bai et al 2019 and Thurlow and Dü rscheid 2020). A lot of work has been done to study meaning related to emojis and memes and how they function within communication (see Deumert 2014; Zhu and Ren 2022; Lynch 2022 and Ljubešić and Fišer 2016). This current study advocates for a user-centric approach to understanding meaning- making. The strength of what I am proposing in my research is how to draw an analysis of meaning-making practices linked to the use of emojis and memes within CMC while allowing users to advocate for themselves from their perspectives. This current research unpacked how the average person on Facebook attached meaning to emojis and memes when they are selected and used to communicate online. The goal was to understand whether the meaning attached is shared and universal or if there was room for different modes of expression and meaning-making. The data collected for this research included quantitative survey data and qualitative interview data. Surveys were used as a starting point for conducting one-on-one interviews with a selected number of people who were open to being interviewed after completing the survey. The study concluded that different emojis and memes are used by different people, in different ways, however, the meaning attached to different emojis, and memes become universal over time when it is shared by people. The data provided evidence that universal and shared meaning occurs. However, within the same data, there was evidence to support that even though shared and universal meaning is happening, there is still room for different modes of expression online. 2025-11-21T07:11:29Z 2025-11-21T07:11:29Z 2025 2025-11-21T07:00:18Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters Masters http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42290 en eng application/pdf Linguistics Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle social media
Facebook users
emojis
memes
computer-mediated communication (CMC)
meaning-making
semiotics
multimodality
translanguaging
surveys and interviews
Francis, Tasneem
The semantics of emojis and memes: understanding meaning- making among social media users
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The semantics of emojis and memes: understanding meaning- making among social media users
title_full The semantics of emojis and memes: understanding meaning- making among social media users
title_fullStr The semantics of emojis and memes: understanding meaning- making among social media users
title_full_unstemmed The semantics of emojis and memes: understanding meaning- making among social media users
title_short The semantics of emojis and memes: understanding meaning- making among social media users
title_sort semantics of emojis and memes understanding meaning making among social media users
topic social media
Facebook users
emojis
memes
computer-mediated communication (CMC)
meaning-making
semiotics
multimodality
translanguaging
surveys and interviews
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42290
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