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British adults think Emojis are bringing down English language
July 31, 2025
YouTubecommissioned a study recently where 2,000 British adults (ages 16 to 65) were asked about their opinions on the current state of the English language. Surprisingly, 94 percent of respondents said that there had been a decline in the correct use of English, with about four out of five respondents saying young people are the worst offenders.
While those numbers might be surprisingly high, what’s less surprising is that almost three-quarters of respondents claimed to be dependent onEmojisand electronic spell-check in their communications.
While correlation is not causation, it’s hard not to draw a comparison between those sets of numbers to conclude that technology, specifically the rise in popularity of Emojis, is perceptively stunting our language growth.
In somewhat related news, a spokesman for YouTube toldThe Telegraphthat English language tutorial videos have risen in popularity by a whopping 126 percent since this time last year. Does that mean that people are aware that their English skills are deteriorating and thus trying to combat the trend?
Emojis are not just for casual conversations between friends anymore. Scholars are already conducting studies onpotential repercussions of using Emojis in the workplace, and in 2016, a High Court judgeincorporated a smiley face Emojiin an official ruling. His reasoning? He wanted to make the verdict comprehensible to a child who was affected by the judgment.
While there’s certainly no harm in the use of Emojis for conversation purposes, there is merit to the idea that using them too much could be detrimental not only to the English language, but also to society at large. After all, if children are raised to use Emojis liberally, who’s to say that there couldn’t one day be a generation that doesn’t understand basic words, instead only knowing Emoji representation for terms?
With Emoji being described by some asthe fastest-growing language in history, that day could be closer than we think.
What are your opinions on the matter? Do you or your friends use Emoji more than you think is appropriate? Or is concern about Emojis and language just making a mountain out of a molehill? Let us know in the comments!
NEXT:See the full list of 161 new Emoji icons coming in 2018
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