Docomo Emojis
49 émojis rendu dans Docomode la conception.
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Haricots
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Lèvres Qui Se Mordent
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Bulles
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Corail
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Béquille
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Visage En Pointillés
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Nid Vide
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Visage Expirant
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Visage Retenant Ses Larmes
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Face In Clouds
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Visage Avec Bouche En Diagonale
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Visage Avec Yeux Ouverts Et Main Sur La Bouche
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Visage Qui Regarde Entre Ses Doigts
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Visage Aux Yeux En Spirales
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Drapeau De La Chine
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Drapeau France
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Drapeau De L'allemagne
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Drapeau De L'italie
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Drapeau Japon
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Drapeau De La Russie
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Drapeau De La Géorgie Du Sud Et Des Îles Sandwich Du Sud
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Drapeau De La Corée Du Sud
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Drapeau Des Emirats Arabes Unis
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Drapeau Des États-Unis
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Main De Fatma
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Main Avec Index Et Pouce Croisés
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Heart On Fire
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Signe Égal Gras
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Index Pointant Vers L’utilisateur
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Bocal
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Main Vers La Gauche
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Lotus
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Pile Faible
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Visage Qui Fond
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Mending Heart
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Boule À Facettes
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Nid Avec Œufs
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Main Paume Vers Le Bas
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Main Paume Vers Le Haut
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Personne Avec Une Couronne
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Toboggan
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Verser Un Liquide
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Main Vers La Droite
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Bouée De Sauvetage
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Visage Qui Fait Un Salut Militaire
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Troll
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Roue
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Woman: Beard
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Radiographie
À propos de Docomo Emojis
Japanese mobile operator NTT Docomo, (previously styled as DoCoMo), is a Japanese phone carrier that played an important part in the introduction of the first widely-used set of emojis. In 1999, Shigetaka Kuritam, an engineer working at NTT Docomo, created an initial set of symbols to enable easier digital communication. These symbols were a part of the messaging features of “i-mode,” one of the first mobile internet services developed and provided by NTT Docomo.
Drawn on a 12 x 12 pixel grid, the NTT Docomo emojis, 176 in number, looked much simpler than the emojis we use today. The picture characters were instantly successful and paved the way for other mobile operators, like au and SoftBank, to introduce their own version of emojis. Everything changed when, in 2010, the Unicode Consortium created a standardized library of picture characters available for iOS and Android devices, as well as Apple and Windows computer systems. The end result was a nearly universal system for communicating via small cartoon images.
By the time this happened, NTT Docomo emojis were slowly becoming obsolete. The emojis said goodbye with a final, original set released on August 1, 2013. Comprised of 698 emojis, it was initially available on handsets carrying Android 4.3 and 44, but later discontinued and replaced with standard Google emoji designs.