Emojis qui vous font paraßtre vieux : les drapeaux rouges des emojis de la génération Z
Hey everyone! Julia here â your resident 23-year-old emoji blogger đ. Today, Iâm spilling the tea on emoji etiquette for Gen Z. If youâre using the wrong smiley, you might be accidentally aging yourself in the group chat. Yep, some emojis Gen Z flat-out hates and considers total âcringe.â In fact, a recent survey of 16â29 year-olds identified 10 emojis that will instantly tag you as oldâ. Gen Z even avoids these with their own peers to not get labeled âcringeââ. So, letâs break down which symbols are đ© red flags and how to swap in fresher vibes instead. (Donât worry, Iâve got sources and Gen Z-approved alternatives for each!)
But first, why the drama over tiny cartoons? đ€ Well, emoji meanings evolve fast. What was hip in 2016 might be cheugy (outdated) now. Generational differences are real â studies show older folks use a smaller range of friendly emojis, while Gen Z uses a wider variety with more humor and edge âpmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov. At mojiedit.com, we know this all too well. Weâve seen how each new wave of users reinvents emoji language (we even decoded Gen Zâs latest emoji slang in 2025â). So it makes sense that some once-popular icons have fallen out of fashion. Essentially, whatâs cool to your mom could be đ to your kid.
Ready to see if youâre guilty of using any âold peopleâ emojis? đ Letâs dive into the top cringe emojis Gen Z canât stand â and what to use instead to keep your texts đŻ fresh.
Emojis Gen Z Hates (and What to Use Instead)
Gen Z has unofficially âcanceledâ a bunch of emojis they find uncool or out-of-touchâ. Below, Iâll list the worst offenders â the ones that might earn you an eye-roll or a âlol ok boomerâ reply â along with why theyâre disliked and how to replace them. Keep in mind, context matters and nothing is truly âbanned.â But if you want to vibe with younger friends, consider retiring these symbols from your regular rotation. đ
đ Thumbs-Up â The Passive Aggressive Acknowledgement
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One of the biggest emoji red flags is the seemingly innocuous đ thumbs-up. To many older users, đ just means âokay, got itâ or a general sign of approval. However, Gen Z often perceives it as rude or passive-aggressive in toneâ. Why? In a casual chat, a lone thumbs-up can feel dismissive â like the digital equivalent of a short âK.â On workplace apps, some younger employees even find it hostile or âunsettlingâ when a boss replies with just đâphilstarlife.comâdeseret.com.
In fact, a survey by Perspectus Global (2,000 people, ages 16â29) found that using đ makes you look âofficially old.â It was ranked the number one emoji that will age youâ. Some Gen Z respondents said it âfeels like people are too lazy to type a responseâ and lacks clarity or warmthâ. As one 24-year-old put it, âNo one my age in the office does itâ because they worry it means the person is madâ.
Gen Z-approved alternative: Instead of a curt đ, try using a more playful or context-specific acknowledgment. A popular option is the âđ€â call-me hand (a.k.a. the shaka sign) â it feels more relaxed and friendly, like saying âcoolâ with a surfer vibe. You can also simply reply with text (e.g. âsounds goodâ ou âokay!â) which comes off as more genuineâ. Gen Z often values the extra effort in writing it out. And if you must use an emoji, a smiling đ€ handshake or even a đ (raised hands) can convey agreement avec positivity. The key is to avoid the lone passive-aggressive thumbs-up that might be interpreted as âwhatever.â
(In group chats with older family, đ is usually fine â theyâll see it as just a thumbs up. But with Gen Z pals or coworkers, you might want to ditch it to stay on their wavelength.
đ Face with Tears of Joy â Not Cool Anymore
Ah, the classic đ laughing-crying face â beloved by millennials everywhere and once the go-to for anything remotely funny. Surprise: Gen Z has declared đ uncool and âfor old people.â In recent years, TikTok and Twitter have been flooded with young folks insisting they âwouldnât be caught dead usingâ the đ emojiâ deseret.com. To them, itâs a try-hard millennial thing now, a bit âbland,â and way overusedâabc7.com.
Donât just take my word for it. CNN interviewed Gen Zers who said they stopped using đ after seeing their moms and older siblings spam it. âI use everything but the laughing emoji,â one 21-year-old admitted, adding that once she noticed older relatives favoring đ, it immediately lost its appealâ. Ouch! No one wants their humor style equated with Momâs Facebook comments.
Another reason Gen Z moved on is that đ was too popular for too long. It was the most-used emoji in the world for yearsâ. Basically, it became basic. As language expert Gretchen McCulloch noted, âTears of Joy was a victim of its own successââ. So what do young people use to convey hysterical laughter now? Two things primarily: the skull emoji (đ) and the loudly crying face (đ) â yes, ironically.
Gen Z-approved alternative: Utilisation đ (skull) to say âIâm deadâ (meaning âIâm dying laughingâ). This has been a huge trend â itâs the visual slang for âthat joke killed meâ. For example, âThat meme you sent has me đ.â The skull perfectly captures âlol I canât, Iâm deadâ humorâ. Another acceptable alternative is the đ loudly crying face used in a hyperbolic wayâ. Yes, Gen Z repurposed đ (more on that emoji next!) to also mean âIâm laughing so hard Iâm crying.â You might see a Gen Z commenter reply with âIâm crying đâ at something hilariously relatable â and theyâre not actually sad at all.
Of course, good old âlolâ ou âlmaoâ in text are fine too, and many Gen Zers still use those acronymsâ. The main point: ditch the đ cry-laugh emoji if you want to appear 2025-cool. Using đ will not only make your friends cackle, but theyâll also appreciate that youâre up to speed on the latest emoji slang. Just remember not to use the skull for serious contexts (Grandma might think someone literally died!).
đ Loudly Crying Face â Melodramatic Much?
This oneâs a bit confusing, because you just heard that Gen Z often uses đ (loudly crying face) as a rire substitute. True! In an ironic or emphatic way, đ is all over Gen Z posts to show intense reaction (e.g. âIâm soooo happy I could cry đâ ou âThis video is so funny đđâ). However, when it comes to using đ earnestly to show sadness, younger folks shy away. The loudly crying face â with its streaming tears â is viewed as over-the-top and outdated for genuine emotions.
Basically, if you text a Gen Z friend something minor like âI miss you đâ, they might giggle at the dramatics or interpret it sarcastically. One Gen Z college student told CNN she prefers the đ emoji over đ because it âfeels more dramaticââabc7.com. That says it all â đ is seen as intentionally dramatic, almost campy. Older generations who use đ sincerely (for actual crying or sadness) can come off as a bit extra to younger eyes.
Moreover, Gen Z has other ways to express being sad or upset that donât involve bawling eyes out. The pleading face đ„ș has largely taken over the sad vibe in a softer way. It shows big watery puppy-dog eyes without the waterworks. For example, instead of âIâm so sad đâ, a Gen Z texter might say âIâm sad đ„șâ â conveying vulnerability or a teary-eyed look, but not full-on sobbing. The nuance is key.
Gen Z-approved alternative: If youâre genuinely sad or upset, try đ„ș (pleading face) for a gentler, more current toneâsloneek.com. Another one is the đ sad but relieved face or a simple đ slightly frowning face, depending on context. These feel less exaggerated than đ. You can also express sadness with words and maybe a single tear emoji đą, which is a bit more restrained than đ (though đą too might be seen as a millennial thing). The point is, dial it back. Gen Z tends to use understated or stylistically âcuteâ emojis for sadness rather than the full ugly-cry. Save đ for when youâre deliberately being overdramatic or when something is so tragically funny you have to cry-laugh. Otherwise, itâs likely to be read as sarcastic or just too much.
(Fun fact: Gen Z also uses đ in non-literal ways â like to show extreme joy or even when something is ridiculously adorable. Itâs become an all-purpose intensity emoji. Context will usually clue you in on whether âđâ means actual crying or âcrying because this is insanely funny/cute.â When in doubt, ask!)
â€ïž Red Heart â Too Basic, Grandpa
We all love the emoji cĆur rouge (â€ïž) â itâs a staple to show love, gratitude, or friendship. However, among Zoomers itâs considered a bit basic and old-fashioned these days. In that poll of young people, the classic red heart was #2 on the list of âemojis that make you look oldââdeseret.com. Why would a simple heart be cringe? For starters, itâs probably overused by older relatives (âLove you dear â€ïž xoxoâ) and on Facebook posts. Gen Z, ever allergic to seeming uncool, have deemed the plain red heart âcringeâ and too straightforwardâvibe.mtâvibe.mt.
Think about it: The red heart means âloveâ in the most traditional sense. Teenagers and 20-somethings often prefer a little irony or specificity. Throwing out a big red heart can feel overly sincere or generic, almost like a Hallmark card when theyâd rather send a meme. One Gen Z commenter said the â€ïž comes off as âintenseâ or formal, especially in new friendships. It might be reserved for oneâs S.O. or mom, but not for casual buddies.
Gen Z also has a whole palette of heart colors đđđ€đ€ with nuanced meanings (did you know a black heart can signify dark humor or âemoâ vibes, and a blue heart can imply trust or friendship?)âsloneek.com. By using a more creative heart symbol, they add personality. The plain red heart, sadly, reads as vanilla. As Vibe media put it, Gen Z is literally âcalling it too basic and cringeââvibe.mt. Oof.
Gen Z-approved alternative: Spice up your heart game with the newer, more expressive âđ«¶â heart hands emoji. This one â two hands forming a heart shape â came out in 2022 and screams Gen Z. It feels playful and sweet, but not as clichĂ©d as a red heart. For example, instead of replying to a friendâs good news with ââ€ïžâ, you might send âđ«¶ yaaaayâ to show love et excitement.
You can also swap in different heart colors to fine-tune the vibe: đ for a more platonic love (popular in K-pop and fandom contexts), đ€ for a sarcastic or goth-chic love (I send black hearts when I ironically adore something dark or spooky), or đ (sparkling heart) for extra enthusiasm. Using a colored heart shows youâre emoji-savvy and not just defaulting to the plain red.
For a totally non-heart alternative, some Gen Z texters even use đ€ the âI love youâ hand sign (which in ASL means ILY) â itâs a cute way to say love ya without a heart. The đ„° smiling face with hearts is another modern fave for showing warmth or affection without relying on the red heart itself. It feels more updated and less like something your 50-year-old aunt would comment on a photo.
In short: â€ïž = heartfelt but old-school, đ«¶ or đ€ = fresher expression of love. So next time youâre tempted to drop a red heart, consider if a newer emoji might capture the sentiment in a more Gen Z-friendly way.
đ OK Hand â Seen As Out-of-Touch
Les âokayâ hand sign (đ) used to be an easy way to signal âall goodâ or agreement. Yet Gen Z has largely phased this one out, associating it with older generations and even certain negative connotations. Part of the issue is that đ had a meme moment where it was misused in extremist contexts (the whole 4chan âOK sign = white powerâ hoax that some took seriously). While thatâs a fringe thing, it did make a lot of younger people double-take at the symbol. Mostly though, Gen Z just finds it unfashionable â something their dad or boss still uses in texts but they donâtâ.
In the youth survey, the OK hand ranked among the top cringe emojis (#3 on the list)â. One Gen Z respondent said âseems like a lot of the older generation are still using this oneâ, implying it hasnât been cool in a minute âvibe.mt. When was the last time you saw a teenager reply âđâ to a message? Probably never â theyâre more likely to just say âbetâ ou âyea thatâs fineâ. The OK sign emoji feels redundant or overly formal in many cases.
Also, similar to the thumbs-up, some interpret a lone đ as sarcastic or snarky. It can come across like âok sure, whatever you say.â For Gen Z who communicate heavily in text, tone is everything, and đ might carry a subtle eye-roll vibe that wasnât intended. Because of these mixed signals, many just avoid it.
Gen Z-approved alternative: Honestly, Gen Z often just drops the emoji altogether and says âokâ or âkkâ in text, or uses a thumbs-up react (in apps that support message reactions) rather than sending the OK hand. If you really want an emoji, the previously mentioned đ€ shaka sign can substitute here too, conveying âok coolâ with a bit more chill.
Another approach is to use đ in a friendly way if you must (though as we covered, that has its pitfalls too). Or try âïž (victory hand) as a more upbeat âsounds good!â â though that one can be seen as slightly hippie-ish, itâs generally positive and less controversial than đ.
The main thing is, unless youâre actually signaling âIâm okayâ after an injury (where đ might still literally make sense), you can probably live without the OK-hand emoji. Your agreement will come through via words or a simple smiley. No need to emulate the guy in the State Farm commercials texting đ. In Gen Z circles, a plain âokie đâ text (or even a meme GIF) will do just fine.
đ© Pile of Poo â Not So Funny Anymore
Who doesnât chuckle at the smiling poop emoji (đ©), right? Well, apparently Gen Z. The poop emoji was a novelty in the 2010s and a favorite for parents joking with kids. Nowadays, younger folks find it childish and kind of gross unless used very sparingly. It showed up on the âold people emojiâ lists (#5 in that survey)âdeseret.com, which suggests that frequently using đ© might date you.
Part of it is practical: how often do you really need a poop emoji in normal conversation? Some older users might toss it in for silliness or to say âthis stinks,â but Gen Z has other slang for that (they might just say something is trash or use the đ€Ą clown emoji to indicate foolishness instead of đ©). One article quipped âstill not sure where youâd use that⊠except if youâre literally describing what youâre doingââvibe.mt â a bit cheeky, but not wrong. The joke of đ© wore off at this point.
Using đ© a lot can seem immature, like youâre stuck in elementary potty humor mode. Itâs the same vibe as making fart jokes â okay in small doses, but not exactly cool. Many Gen Zers prefer edgier or more absurd humor. If they want to call something crap, they might use the trash can emoji đïž or the prohibited sign (đ«) overlaid on an icon, or just say âthatâs poopâ in words (shockingly straightforward, I know).
Gen Z-approved alternative: Reserve đ© for when you know your audience appreciates the juvenile humor (it can still be funny among close friends at the right moment). Otherwise, to express a negative reaction, try đ€Ą (clown) to call out something silly or foolish â this has become a popular diss emoji for âthatâs stupidâ or âI feel like a clown.â Another is the đ thumbs down if youâre simply rating something bad (though thumbs down is also a bit old-school, itâs more universally understood).
If youâre tempted to use đ© to say âIâm in deep crapâ or âthis situation stinks,â you could use the đ”âđ« dizzy face ou đ© weary face to convey distress in a less cartoony way. And if itâs literal bathroom talk⊠maybe just spare your friends the details altogether đ . In general, less is more here â the poop emoji isnât outright offensive, it just might make you look like you havenât updated your emoji repertoire since the days when the Emoji Movie was in theaters.
đ Monkey Covering Eyes â Cute or Cringe?
Les âsee-no-evilâ monkey (đ) â with hands over eyes â is often used to express playful embarrassment or âOops, I didnât want to see that!â. Itâs admittedly adorable. So why would Gen Z side-eye this emoji? Mainly because itâs been overdone in cutesy contexts and feels a bit 2014 Tumblr. Many younger users now feel the monkey emojis (đđđ) are cringe for serious conversations. They might drop an âđâ ironically, but if you use it earnestly (like âOMG I canât look đâ), it could seem immature.
In that Gen Z cancel list, the monkey covering eyes was included as an emoji that makes you look out-of-touch âdeseret.com. Anecdotally, Iâve had friends tease someone for using đ like âhaha, feeling shy like a monkey?â â basically implying itâs a bit childish. Itâs reminiscent of older texting culture where people said âteehee đâ. Gen Z humor tends to be more sardonic; an âawkwardâ situation might get the đŹ grimace emoji or just a âyikesâ rather than an âeek đâ.
That said, some Gen Z do still like the monkey (one blog even protested, âpersonal favourite emoji⊠is it not cool anymore?!ââvibe.mt). Itâs not hated with vitriol, just seen as very cutesy. So unless thatâs the vibe you want, you might use something else.
Gen Z-approved alternative: Pour embarrassment ou âI canât believe I just saw thatâ, le facepalm emoji đ€Š (or đ€Šââïž/đ€Šââïž) is a go-to replacement. It conveys âOMG, sighâ in a more grown-up way (e.g. âI canât believe I did that đ€Šââïžâ instead of đ). Another great one is the upside-down smiley đ, which Gen Z loves for awkward humor or sarcasm. If a situation is cringey-funny, âđâ says âwell, that happenedâ with a wry tone.
Pour shyness or flustered feelings, the smiling face with hand over mouth đ€ can work â itâs basically a human version of the monkey covering its mouth/eyes. And for âI didnât want to see thatâ moments (like an overshare online), some just use the eyeball emoji đ suivi de đ« to humorously indicate ânope, I didnât see that.â Creative, right?
In summary, you donât have to banish đ completely (Iâll admit I still find it cute occasionally). Just know it might read as juvenile. Using a human emoji or a more ironic one will feel more on-trend with how Gen Z expresses those âOMGâ moments.
đŹ Grimacing Face â The âCringeâ Emoji
Last but not least, letâs talk about the đŹ grimacing face â you know, the one with bared teeth like an awkward grin. This emoji literally looks like cringe, and appropriately, Gen Z has dubbed it the ultimate cringe emoji. In that survey it was #10 on the âmakes you look oldâ listâ deseret.com, but more telling is how young people interpret it. When older folks use đŹ, they usually mean âoopsâ ou âyikes, thatâs rough.â For Gen Z, however, đŹ âscreams âcringeââ â as in âwow, thatâs embarrassing⊠you shouldnât have said thatâ âsloneek.com.
A Gen Z-oriented guide bluntly stated: âOlder generations use đŹ to express awkwardness… For Gen Z, itâs a mix of disappointment and secondhand embarrassment â usually for someone who should know better.ââ Yikes! So if you drop a đŹ in a earnest way, a young person might think youâre cringing at them or the situation. Itâs almost more of a judgment emoji in their eyes, like a silent âooo thatâs cringeâ reaction. Not exactly the friendly vibe you might intend.
Because đŹ has become associated with calling something cringe, Gen Z doesnât often use it to describe themselves. Theyâd rarely text âIâm đŹ right now.â Instead, they might use đ« (melting face) or đ for personal awkwardness. đŹ is more what theyâd comment at a fail video or an out-of-touch statement. So if you misuse it, you could accidentally imply the wrong thing.
Gen Z-approved alternative: If you want to convey your own awkwardness or discomfort, try đ (grinning face with sweat) â it shows nervous laughter, a more self-deprecating âwhoops!â feeling. Gen Z still uses đ to say âhaha, this is awkward.â The đ„Ž woozy face or the new đ« melting face are also trendy ways to express âIâm embarrassed/this is not fine.â They have that blended cringe vibe without the same connotation as đŹ.
For reacting to something cringe you saw (instead of using đŹ which can seem harsh), Gen Z might just write âcringeâ outright, or use that skull emoji đ again (implying youâre âdeadâ from cringe). They also might use đ€ą nauseated face humorously to say âthat gave me ick.â It depends on the context, but usually a more specific or over-the-top emoji is chosen to avoid the ambiguous grimace.
So unless you mean to telegraph âOMG cringe!â, it might be best to retire đŹ from your daily texts. There are cooler ways to say something is awkward or uncomfortable that wonât make you look like â well â đŹ. Remember, for Gen Z, đŹ est cringeâ, so using it unironically might label you as cringe. And we definitely donât want that, right?
Navigating Emoji Culture Like a Pro
Before you freak out and purge your emoji keyboard, note that context and audience are everything. If youâre texting your peers (and your peers are over 30), nobody is likely to judge your use of đ or đ. But understanding Gen Zâs emoji red flags can be super helpful, whether youâre a Millennial trying not to embarrass yourself in front of younger coworkers or a parent hoping to better connect with your teen. Emojis are a fun, colorful part of communication â and each generation puts its own spin on them âpmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov.
The bottom line: language evolves, and so do emojis. What was cool yesterday might be cheugy today, and thatâs okay. Staying aware of these trends (and maybe gently teasing each other about them) is part of the fun. As a Gen Z emoji enthusiast, Iâll be the first to say we have our own weird codes and inside jokes with emojis. (For instance, we turned the simple đ skull into a laugh riot, as you saw, and who knows what emoji weâll meme-ify next!)
If youâre unsure about an emojiâs vibe, err on the side of words or ask a friendly Gen Z â we honestly love explaining our goofy slang. By swapping out a few cringe emojis for fresher ones, youâre showing that youâre tuned in and respectful of the ever-changing online culture. In other words, youâre saying âI get itâ, which can go a long way in cross-generational communication.
So next time youâre about to react with a đ or sign off with a â€ïž, maybe try a âđâš jk donâtâ (just kidding!). Experiment with a đ€, đ«¶, or đ and see if you notice a difference in the vibe. It might feel odd at first, but as we say at Mojiedit: language, even visual language, is always evolving â and a little adaptation can keep your digital chats feeling fresh and inclusiveâ.
đ Conclusion: Keep Your Emoji Game Fresh
To sum up, emojis evolve just like slang, fashion, and memes. Therefore, if you keep firing off the same symbols you used back in 2016, thereâs a good chance youâre aging yourself in the group chatâyikes! Luckily, swapping a few cringeâworthy icons for Gen Zâapproved upgrades is super easy and honestly kind of fun. Moreover, updating your emoji vocabulary shows younger friends and coworkers that you respect their digital culture, so everyone feels seen (and nobody feels silently judged by a rogue đ).
Below is a quickâglance cheat sheet. Copy it, bookmark it, or tape it to your laptopâwhatever helps you remember which emojis scream âIâm oldâ and which ones say âI get the vibe.â đ
Happy texting, and may your emoji game be forever on point! đâš
Questions fréquemment posées et réponses
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Why does Gen Z think the đ âtearsâofâjoyâ emoji is cringe?
In a nutshell, đ became a victim of its own popularity. It dominated everyoneâs keyboards for nearly a decade and now signals âMillennial Facebook humor.â Younger texters prefer fresher, more ironic symbolsâlike đ to mean âIâm dead (laughing).â Multiple surveys of 16â to 29âyearâolds confirm it tops the âmakes you look oldâ list, so swapping in a skull keeps your punchline feeling 2025âcool.
Is it unprofessional to use đ or đ at work?
Not alwaysâbut be mindful of your teamâs age mix. Many Gen Z employees read a lone đ as dismissive ou passiveâaggressive (basically a digital âKâ). If your workplace skews younger, a quick text reply (âsounds good!â) or a more upbeat emojiâlike đ€ ou đ€âfeels warmer and less ambiguous.
How can I tell if an emoji has gone out of style?
Quick test: Do your younger friends use it sincerely? If not, itâs probably dated. Watch TikTok comments, Discord chats, or even Mojieditâs emoji guides. Trends shift fast; staying curious and asking Gen Z pals straightâup (âIs đ still cool?â) is the best hack.
Does the platform matter (iOS vs. Android vs. TikTok)?
Definitely. Emojis render differently on each OS, and Gen Z is hyperâaware of design shifts. An icon that looks cute on iPhone can appear offâmodel (or downright weird) on Android. Always preview your post in the app youâre usingâor stick to universally recognized emojis like đ ou đ«¶ that stay consistent across platforms.
Wonât these âcoolâ alternatives become cringe eventually, too?
Yupâthatâs just internet culture. Language evolves, and so do emojis. Think of updating your emoji set like refreshing slang or fashion: whatâs đ„ today might be đïž tomorrow. Staying flexible (and a little playful) is the trick; if đ ever feels dated, Gen Z will invent a new laugh emoji, and Mojiedit will be here to decode it for you. đ
