[1]
This is the second of five lessons devoted to
non-verbal communication (introduction, facial expressions and gestures, body
language and posture, non-verbal communication across cultures, and non-verbal
communication in virtual contexts). Each lesson should take students
approximately 2 hours to complete. Suggested answers, bibliography and
additional resources are provided at the end of each lesson. This work is
licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, is
open for all to use and modify with attribution to BADGE- Becoming a Digital
Global Engineer (Project 2019-1-FR01-KA203-063010 - 167 512 512).
[2] All images in this lesson were taken from www.pixabay.com (Accessed February
2022).
[3]
To distinguish between emojis
and emoticons, see explanation in https://www.britannica.com/story/whats-the-difference-between-emoji-and-emoticons
[4] Copyright permission granted by BBC News
Permissions Team (EO) on 18 July 2022. The images and tweets posted in the original article
have been removed to protect original owners’ copyrights.
[5]
[6]
In the original article, the tweet
by Kim Zetter states “In Israel, you generally use this gesture when you’re
annoyed or angry with someone”
[7]
In the original article, the tweet by Emile Hokayem
states “This emoji represents several things in the Arab world, including two
extremes […] (slowly, wait, calm down, patience, etc.) or […] (you will see
what will happen to you, as in a threat).”
[8]
Lance Ulanoff is cited in the original BBC article
with this comment.
[9]
@SoshIU is quoted in
the original text as “MANDU YOU”. MANDU HEART.
[10]
To learn more about the Unicode standards and
development, see https://home.unicode.org/