- 17 hours ago
فسيلة - transplant
هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات
It is a digital library containing thousands of Arabic videos in all fields.
قوائم تشغيل فسيلة
https://www.dailymotion.com/fasela/playlists
هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات
It is a digital library containing thousands of Arabic videos in all fields.
قوائم تشغيل فسيلة
https://www.dailymotion.com/fasela/playlists
Category
📚
LearningTranscript
00:02Ha!
00:03Ha!
00:07Helbzrq!
00:07He has the right to be blue!
00:09What is this garbage?
00:10revulsion!
00:11And I'm Mustafa
00:12What kind of promises are these?
00:13What is this? What is this?
00:14What's in it?
00:15What's wrong with you?
00:17I'll spend years suffering with you
00:19Don't you feel there's a problem?
00:21Mr. Qalb, my problem isn't with you personally.
00:23My problem is with the meaning of your existence.
00:25This means we're just friends.
00:26Mustafa Habibi is up there, I'm so happy for you
00:28This is the eighth time your generation has changed this year
00:30So, when was the last time you received a red heart?
00:32Yesterday, by the way
00:33Those who are from your mother don't count, Mustafa.
00:35I have a blue heart
00:35And they send me red hearts, no big deal.
00:37One came in 2017
00:38He almost made a mistake
00:40And then I sent you four laughing emojis
00:42He laughs, "You followed me, I am more merciful."
00:44It's not necessary to mention these things.
00:46What do you want from me?
00:47Tell me the truth
00:48How can I help you?
00:49Hamdi, I'm the one who wants to help you.
00:50I'm the one who wants to leave here.
00:51Yesterday's house tells you
00:53I'm bored
00:54She calls her "Rektab"
00:55Why, Mustafa, did you leave her?
00:56Okay, okay, fine.
00:58I will tell her, and I hope in God.
00:59I love
01:00Play
01:01Truth Arder
01:02Taif, my love, do you want me to stay living with you here?
01:04Can I sleep next to you here?
01:05for him?
01:06You are slaves
01:06Okay, okay, I'll give her the dog sticker.
01:09That's what Scrumto does.
01:10How does my love work? Like this?
01:12Very nice
01:13Delete her number for me
01:14And her food
01:15We look normal, Mustafa.
01:18Professor of Cardiology?
01:20Professor of Cardiology?
01:21My heart and my aging
01:22Yaww, говорит, اوي عام شخر
01:24This is what we want in Mりました
01:32Single, Amru, and Shardin
01:33Welcome to a new episode of "Burj Al-Dahih" in 2018!
01:36In Stor 1887
01:37Adam, Polish ophthalmologist
01:39Allal Zaminov
01:40Invention of the best
01:41Urge the workers of Ar'aiko
01:42Language is a product that has evolved over time from ancient origins.
01:45Likewise, in European languages, it came from Latin
01:48This product is flavored with thousands of words and thousands of dialects.
01:51And after many, many years, he settles on the rules of your doubt.
01:54It is through this that we can recognize ourselves, belong to it, and it distinguishes us from others.
01:57A product is born and grows, we don't plan it.
02:00Zeminov will break all these rules and invent the language himself.
02:03He will present a complete language in his book.
02:05Fandimento Desperana, 1905
02:08Under the name of the Esperanto language
02:09Despite his medical specialization, Zeminov spoke more than seven languages.
02:13This is due to his life in the Russian Empire
02:15At that time, there were languages such as Russian, Polish, Liddish, and German.
02:19All peoples hate each other
02:20But he was aware that the multilingualism of peoples
02:23It is the reason for the market of understanding
02:24Which sometimes leads to wars
02:25That's why he decided to invent a language that wouldn't belong to a specific people.
02:28It is useless for a deceiver to obtain her rights.
02:30And so all nations have no excuse left to do so.
02:33We learn the language and unite on it as a universal language.
02:36We all share the same culture and identity
02:38And thus wars end.
02:39The language is already spreading
02:41And thousands began speaking it
02:42Indeed, the principality of Borsnin is on the border between Belgium and Germany.
02:45All its inhabitants began to adopt Esperanto
02:47To confirm that their country is neutral
02:49To the point that she speaks her own private language.
02:52And the precedent that Zeminot meant in his invention
02:54But my dear, all of this is just daylight during war.
02:56First Labor
02:56Which confirmed that peace is a difficult thing
02:58It's difficult to create language on its own.
03:00And the country of Ze Mursnin was saved by Esperanto
03:02But the Germans invaded it
03:03After the war, it was divided between Belgium and France.
03:06By the time of the second labor war
03:07Hitler had warned against Esperanto in his book, Struggle
03:10The book that contains the first and third place
03:12It is the fifth in the sales charts.
03:13And what's between them is in my heart, a Hebrew kiss.
03:15A dialogue with a friend of the grave by Dr. Mustafa Mahmoud
03:18And the rest is Ahmed Marati
03:19Hitler claimed it was a Jewish conspiracy
03:22Because Zeminov was Jewish
03:23And indeed, its speakers were targeted.
03:26My dear, some of Zeminov's children are a degree
03:27They were subjected to extermination in the Holocaust
03:29And the story of a language that tries to achieve peace
03:31And regret, in its harshness
03:33The truth is, my dear, there are languages now
03:36We can consider them universal languages
03:38Oh Abu Hamid, the Esperanto dream has come true
03:40You will hug, Abu Hamid
03:41Put your hand down, you crooked one!
03:42These languages have already spread
03:44But it did not spread for peaceful reasons.
03:46Esperanto costume
03:47But it spread because it was the language of a powerful empire.
03:51It colonized the world for a long period of time.
03:53English Empire uniform
03:54and the French Empire
03:56English, my dear
03:57It is found in one and a half billion people
04:00This is a creation and a question that continues to arise.
04:01Is it possible for a universal language to emerge?
04:03Without wars and destruction
04:04Or forced by its owners
04:06As happened with the United Kingdom
04:08France, Portugal and Spain
04:09Is it possible for there to be only one language?
04:11People from all countries flock to it
04:13Regardless of their native languages
04:15Let me tell you now, my dear
04:16About the language you use
04:17212 countries
04:19With a population of 29 out of 10 billion people
04:22It doesn't need rules or grammar.
04:24I just need someone with a conscience.
04:26Language, my dear
04:28Do you need a calculator?
04:29Yawa Ahmed
04:31You are more truthful in the language of love.
04:32I swear to God I went bankrupt
04:33child
04:34child
04:34Who went bankrupt?
04:35I'm talking about the universal language.
04:37Emojis
04:37This is a language, Abu Hamid
04:39Every day, my dear
04:39A billion emojis are sent every day
04:42on Facebook
04:4250% of Instagram comments
04:44emojis
04:45Tell them, joke and joke
04:46Between 3 and 2 out of 10
04:48One billion internet users
04:503% of them use emojis
04:527% of countries are charismatic.
04:54They don't do action scenes
04:55He only does it for minor offenses.
04:55They don't make any more khalakats
04:56They don't write with emojis
04:57They're talking, ha ha
04:58The one who even has a thousand good things
04:59Ha ha, that's all.
05:00It remains for her
05:02death
05:03Hey Abu Hamid
05:04But the night is brief.
05:05Mahesh language
05:05This is a picture
05:06You, when you're talking like that
05:07So that I have a wise man inside me
05:09He's going to tell me something I've never even thought about in my life.
05:12I know I'm going to lay out a bed for you
05:13To tell you that you are yes and fully aware of what I know
05:16Are you my dear?
05:17I'm sure emojis aren't a language.
05:19Tell me, what's on your mind about that moment in 2015?
05:21When Oxford Dictionary announces
05:23Rose of Dyer
05:24Word of the Year
05:25Most used word globally
05:27This word
05:29The face that cries from a drop of itchy water
05:31Do you know this face, my dear?
05:32The one who always comes last will die
05:33Here we are
05:34This, my dear, is not talk.
05:35This is what the Oxford Dictionary says
05:36This is a great dictionary science.
05:38Emojis may be a form of communication
05:39It has no rules or grammar
05:41Fish, we won't know
05:42Because it is simply a sound
05:44I'm not going to tell you to extract a heart from the phrase.
05:46And translate it
05:47You know, my dear, if I were to analyze your heart
05:49It will be majrūl with a kasra
05:54But emojis have a history.
05:56It predates even the advent of computers and the internet.
05:58Let's tell her
05:59While the invention of the smiley face
06:01It's back with the designer Harby Ball
06:02What he did in 1969 for an insurance company
06:05In 2017, a vessel was discovered
06:07He will return to the Hussein community
06:08It is 3700 years old
06:10Focus, my dear
06:11You will find that there are fees on it that are considered
06:13The oldest smiley face in history
06:15While in the letters of the Abbot of Flecchi
06:17Bernard Hint, 1741
06:19He draws next to his signature
06:20In these attempts
06:22The leimoji was drawn by hand.
06:23The artist or writer
06:24A gentle attempt to soften the tone of the speech
06:26It is written
06:27When I tell you when I'm coming
06:28Change when I tell you when I'm coming
06:29This makes a difference.
06:30While the first use of the emoji
06:32The writer writes it
06:33It appeared in 1862
06:34During the New York Times broadcast
06:36Lincoln's speech
06:37Nobody knows if this was intentional.
06:39It wasn't a typographical error.
06:40Until it started to appear
06:41Many intentional shapes in the magazine
06:43This was a comic magazine
06:441882
06:45This type
06:46It will be known as the Amutekon
06:47This means you use tick marks and parentheses.
06:50In the article, the writer
06:51To create an expressive shape
06:53The famous novel
06:54Freddy Mir Nabokov
06:55Once, Betzil spoke about his place among writers.
06:57A man said
07:02The same smile remains in his face.
07:04He writes and replies with it all the time
07:06Regarding similar questions
07:07Bahia Adizi
07:07All the attempts we mentioned were individual or farcical.
07:11It's like climbing the markers
07:13And send
07:13While the first time an emotecon is generated
07:15It performs a function in the text.
07:18As we requested, iron
07:18It was September 19, 1982
07:21When Neale Swartz was a student at Carnegie Mellon University
07:23News broke out about the university's computer network.
07:25Mercury leakage occurred
07:27No, my dear
07:28This was not real news.
07:29But part of the different Ziqiya
07:31He was stingy with more than one paragraph
07:33He is asking for a solution.
07:34Zay Aref, the one who knows theological issues
07:35Like they say, an orange cart overturned.
07:37The oranges are still growing
07:38The oranges are counted as missing
07:39Example to put numbers and solve
07:42Don't put yourself in the same boat as the trader who lost.
07:44And the same thing that changed
07:45The oranges were sweet and had no eyesight.
07:47solution
07:47At that time, Professor Scott E. Valman said
07:49solution
07:50Oh people
07:51Any note written as a joke or by default
07:53We will add this symbol to it.
07:55If it was a genie, we would add this symbol.
07:57Blood of Mutasim, blood of Kasha
07:58From this we can say
08:00Etolyte Emote Cones
08:01The godfather of emojis spread throughout the world
08:05In Europe the situation was different from Asia
08:08This means that in the West, emojis will appear at a 90-degree angle.
08:11Just like your uncle Scott did
08:12In this way, or this way, for example
08:13While in Asia, the writing is horizontal.
08:15It will appear in a more avo-like form
08:16They will call it Kamuji
08:18Which is the emoji, but with the letter "J".
08:19So, my dear, the best means of communication are the old Nokia mobile phones.
08:21I see the shapes, the beauty, and the sweetness
08:23These are all emote cones
08:24unless
08:25Before the emojis, there was Ema, Abu Hamid
08:26The word emoji appeared in 1999
08:28Why is the designer in Japan Shige Taka Kurita?
08:31You're supposed to say it at home, Abu Hamid, right?
08:32The one who worked at the mobile and internet company DuComo
08:36I see the emoji cones are poorly expressed.
08:38We are cropped in it with punctuation marks
08:40Why don't we create a more expressive display image on a canvas?
08:42You can select them directly from the keyboard instead of creating them with punctuation marks.
08:46And indeed, 176 emojis were created.
08:4816 by 16 pixels
08:50Two excerpts from the Manga drawings
08:51Shige Taka's drawings are now housed in the Museum of Modern Art in New York.
08:56Considered the first step for emojis in the virtual world
08:59The Shige Taka emojis will conquer not just Japan, but all of Asia.
09:04Young people from all over the world will download special applications.
09:07The emojis will recognize their mobile phones
09:09All of this will attract the attention of Apple.
09:11Which one will decide to be the first company
09:12This will change the emojis from a Japanese option to a global option.
09:15You don't need all this twisting and turning
09:17Just so we can get off their phones
09:18But in order for this to happen
09:19I needed the websites of the most important entity in the world of code.
09:22Texts Unicode Consortium
09:24Simply put, my dear
09:25Any word or letter you type on a computer screen
09:28It gets encoded
09:29The system converts them into numbers
09:30Pi equals ten and i equals nine
09:32This is called Encoden
09:33We make this equal to this
09:34The problem is that every country and every system
09:36His entire system, with its numbers
09:38If you transfer text from one system to a different system
09:40The text cannot be displayed correctly.
09:42Because every system has its own set of numbers
09:44The one that is used in decode and encode
09:46As for your Unicode blindness
09:47I want to do the unification
09:49Unification of a non-profit organization
09:51Established 1999
09:52To unify the process and create a single encoding system
09:56For all the text in the world
09:57It means companies like Huawei, Apple, and Google.
09:59Those who are fighting each other in all countries
10:01They go to Unicode
10:02They sit down and unite
10:03They drink their tea from the same system
10:05They all work under the same supervision.
10:06That's why they call it
10:09It means the United Forces of the Text Supporter
10:12And even though you put emojis in the text
10:14It is text
10:15And in order to meet in the operating systems affiliated with Unicode
10:18It must be approved by the Unicode Committee.
10:20It operates on a single system.
10:21Before you introduce these operating systems
10:23That's why
10:23In 2009, Apple engineers will go
10:25Yasuo Kida and Peter Edber
10:26They are asking for emojis to be added to Unicode.
10:29Which will take a whole year until she agrees
10:31In 2011, Apple will present
10:32First official emoji keyboard for users
10:35And after two years, you'll be getting Android
10:37At that moment, the emojis began to fulfill Speranto's dream.
10:39And take over the world and unite on a universal language
10:42Not just for Japan
10:43So much so that World Emoji Day is June 17th
10:45Apple's release of the Calendar program coincides with
10:48For Mac systems in 2002
10:49The occasion means a lavish invitation in Japan.
10:5172% of internet users
10:53They found that expressing themselves with emojis was easier than using words in their language.
10:57While Esperanto failed in 1922 to be included among the languages of the United Nations
11:02and its international recognition
11:03In 2015, four years later
11:05From its adoption by Unicode
11:07He will thank former US President Barack Obama
11:10Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe
11:11During his visit to the house to explain
11:13Because they gave the world emojis
11:15Emojis are starting to appear in politicians' statements.
11:18Hillary Clinton outfit
11:18Official reports from the House of Representatives to state
11:20Like reports about the Millennines in 2014
11:22As described by the American historian
11:24Natalia Melman Peterzela
11:26I don't know, that's her name.
11:27Emojis are no longer just symbols.
11:30This is a strategy to get people
11:33And here we come to the question
11:34Why did emojis achieve such overwhelming success?
11:37According to the Shellen-Weaver model
11:39Model of Communication
11:40Presented by Clot Shannon and Warren Weaver
11:411948
11:43If you have a message, you perform the encoding process on it.
11:46It means you translate the words into your language.
11:47And she says it, and someone receives it.
11:49It is done by the decoding process
11:50He interprets your words so he knows how to respond.
11:52This communication process sometimes gets messed up
11:54Because of the language barrier
11:55If you speak a language I don't understand
11:57At that point, the focus shifted to visual communication.
12:00It's like being in a foreign country and feeling unwell
12:02So you order her around because you don't know the meaning of "ja'al"
12:04And the person understands what you want
12:06According to statistics
12:0755% of effective communication
12:09It is through body language
12:1138% of the voice
12:13He came in, my dear.
12:14If you are in a virtual medium
12:15Like online texting
12:16You see the 55%
12:18And I haven't heard the 38%
12:20So, my dear, 93% of you are birds
12:22Here's the benefit of emojis
12:24Because it appears and fills this void
12:26What is the size of the gap?
12:2793%
12:28Tani doesn't cover it all.
12:29That's why
12:30Linguist Vivian Evans
12:32Emojis are considered
12:33The body language of the digital age
12:35Body language of the digital age
12:37Indeed, in a study by a psychologist
12:39no
12:39The brain reacts to facial and body language in different ways.
12:44The brain reacts to emoticons.
12:46Which is even simpler
12:47From Emoticons
12:48Assuming it is truly confused
12:49This is a flower from the time of the centuries
12:50The studies in it confirmed
12:51The use of emoticons by companies in their transactions
12:53Enhance the camera's sense of smell
12:55or friendship
12:55or lost intimacy
12:57In times of distancing
12:58Human beings yearn for body language and intimacy.
13:00More than text
13:01All these reasons, my dear, caused the emotions
13:03It surpasses 7,000 languages currently spoken in the world.
13:07By God, Abu Ahmed, that's a very inspiring story.
13:10And I'll give you two, and then Ben Kassan from my side.
13:13Why from the capital
13:14dear
13:14Wait, Ahok
13:15And I'll make it easy for you.
13:17It has a dramatic structure and a plot.
13:18What is this?
13:19I'm suffering from a plot problem, my dear.
13:21Emotions
13:21It conquered the world because of its simplicity
13:23It means "overflow" in Arabic
13:24Apple in English
13:25French Bomb
13:26While in Emotions it is
13:28picture of an apple
13:29Take the samra
13:30And he heard it repeatedly
13:31Najla tells her to pray
13:32Your comfort
13:32When we talk about apples
13:34We're talking about this
13:35Let's talk about this picture
13:35But what feathers, Abu Ahmad?
13:36This language is very easy
13:37I appreciated the unity of the world
13:38One of the most important problems
13:40Which appeared during the Esperanto era
13:41Despite the hardship of time
13:42And dedications
13:43It makes it new for Naj
13:44Language as words and grammar
13:46Derived in its pronunciation
13:47From European languages
13:49Because the man in the end
13:50European
13:50Therefore
13:51It is difficult to teach the Asawi
13:52Nor the African
13:53Because African
13:53Patched and tattooed now
13:55I am following
13:55So you don't misunderstand
13:56It's Boomer
13:57Of course, this point will be published.
13:58I'll be the rest of Boomer
13:59The problem
14:00This problem, my dear
14:01It was in the emojis
14:03Eza ya Abu Hameer
14:04Emojis
14:04Derived from language
14:06belonging to a specific country
14:07What is this, man?
14:08Let us explain
14:09Give him angry red emojis
14:11After the adoption of Unicode
14:13Emojis
14:14People discovered good
14:15O God, make it good
14:16These emojis
14:18It represents Western culture
14:20The one I approved
14:20And the Japanese culture that created it
14:22But it ignores many cultures
14:24For example, in the first version of the emojis
14:27All the whispering is in its egg-shaped shot
14:28Sushi
14:29If there were six emojis
14:30Tacos and burritos
14:31African cuisine
14:33Not available
14:33Occupational Emojis
14:34doctor's uniform
14:35Nor the engineer
14:36All young people
14:37There are no women
14:38Nor elderly
14:38The emoji of the Nubian in front of you
14:40Many cultures
14:41Consider him a limit of protection
14:42Because the person is drawing while asleep
14:43He goes out into the hall
14:44Originally inspired
14:45From Japanese mango
14:46And not every culture
14:47You'll understand him
14:48Remember, my dear, my days
14:49There was a big house
14:50On the hands that are two years old
14:51Are they claiming
14:52And they don't do anything
14:53High five
14:54A great injustice has passed
14:55All this talk
14:56It made people accuse Unicode
14:58It's a group of white-skinned people.
15:00It scares the whole world
15:01The one whose culture is similar
15:02Japanese painting culture
15:03One of the Unicode members
15:05He says that annexing any country's system
15:06Its language is Unicode
15:07It used to be easy
15:08Because you're learning her language
15:09It has system no
15:10For each letter
15:11For every word
15:11And that's it
15:12That's it.
15:13Imam
15:13With different printed emojis
15:14This is not a language of words or prohibitions
15:16These are endless shapes
15:17And here a challenge arose
15:18The emojis
15:19You must represent it with pictures
15:20All the cultures of the world
15:21There should be
15:23In 2014
15:25What happened was
15:28He started adding things
15:29Unisex casual wear
15:31In emojis
15:31Flags of excluded countries
15:33Palestinian flag
15:34In 2015
15:34It began to appear
15:35Wabshin Skin Tone
15:36In the same year
15:37You choose the color of the emoji spray
15:38And Tuni Code began
15:39Applications are accepted from all cultures.
15:41Hijab emoji costume
15:42The student requested it
15:43From Berlin
15:43She is 16 years old
15:44Long live Abu Hamid
15:45She's the one who got the code quickly and behind her
15:46It means people have time for grades
15:48Every uprooting is heard and responded to
15:50Bravo, my dear
15:51Bravo, my dear!
15:52I commend you when you say something nice.
15:53Oh Abu Hamid
15:54This didn't happen in '98 or '90
15:55I'm a mistake
15:56Let's go back to where we left off.
15:57Your words
15:58He's the one who said it
15:59Sander Peach
15:59Google's C/O
16:01Sal 2017
16:01When Twitter went down
16:03Good limit
16:04Around the burger emoji
16:05Listen now, my dear
16:06Details of this crisis
16:07Which came and went
16:09On the topic of social communication
16:11Twitter
16:11Google
16:12It was empty in the emoji of the burger sandwich
16:14Cheese from underneath
16:16Meet me, meet me, meet me, meet me
16:17The cheese was removed from the top.
16:18How?
16:19No, Abu Hamid, don't be silly.
16:20Hey Abu Hamid, what's up?
16:21We can't discuss these topics on air.
16:23This will cause big problems
16:24This is the Cheddar area
16:25We can't take it
16:27Oh my dear, you are a son of the country and a noble man.
16:28I didn't want to talk about these topics during this time.
16:30If it weren't for the historical context
16:32You're lucky, my dear
16:33Of course, the method
16:33Addressing this problem is a top priority for Google.
16:37The truth is that there were many requests for Unicode.
16:39From people who are ignorant
16:40However, this process is important
16:42Because of this, people become more important than you.
16:44From a Twitter user
16:46Who is it, Abu Hamid? The brands
16:47Because it's more important than Twitter
16:49Is it him?
16:49And what does Abu Hamid have to do with the Telendat issue?
16:50Let me tell you that marketing expert Lil Wagner
16:53He says that brand analysis of data containing emojis
16:56And what they call
16:57Sentimental analysis
16:58It's much easier because emojis express the writer's feelings.
17:02Without needing readers
17:03also
17:04Users prefer this if they are expressing the best emojis
17:06Let big brands push the Unicode
17:09Ford carrier uniform
17:10The famous carrier that happened in 2019
17:11To add the pickup track emoji
17:13For example, one of the pressures is adding cultural dishes like tacos.
17:16And then large restaurant chains like Taco Bell emerge.
17:20Wara, carrying chocolate emoji demands
17:22KitKat appears
17:23This led people like the American writer Douglas Rushkopf to...
17:26And computer science professor Keith Weinstein
17:28They consider Unicode, despite its apparent democratic nature, to be...
17:31It receives and processes orders.
17:33But it is a prostrate, lying-down thing.
17:35The influence of major brands and companies is a burden on them.
17:38According to the psychology professor at the University of Toronto
17:40That Lomano Visca emojis have not solved the problem of communication as a universal language
17:44Because we have different cultures
17:45Even if we agree on one emoji
17:47In 25% of users
17:49Sometimes a single emoji translates to different meanings.
17:52According to a Guardian article titled "Smiley Face"
17:54Smiley face, which was a symbol of optimism and joy in the Janzi tradition.
17:57The length of passive aggression remained
17:59A method of passive violence
18:00She throws words at him
18:01If I were to name this yellow thing, I would know many.
18:03Take your time with the coffee
18:05He was late with the companions
18:06I'm smiling.
18:07So you don't say I'm depressed
18:08Even ordinary emojis like eggplant and peach
18:11Innocent plants from the Earth's orbit
18:19My dear, Apple tried so hard in iOS to
18:22Peach design changed
18:23And it remains, meaning you can't cancel it completely.
18:25She says her season is over
18:26Here, my dear, we are faced with a language based on images.
18:30Which is the easiest way to express
18:32She became a singer between cultures
18:34Every culture wants images that represent it
18:36Even if we agree on this
18:37A single image can have different meanings.
18:39Fesi Bahween with feathers
18:40This is all online text
18:41If you're fed up with all this, leave the internet and send the answer.
18:43Come on, dear, the emojis are about to transform
18:45From a hypothetical problem in the chat
18:46Sometimes a problem can mean the difference between a person's life and death.
18:50Professor of Law in Santa Clara, Eric Goldman
18:53He says that the number of crimes in which emojis were a part
18:56It rose from a single case in 2004
18:58Lamia's case of 2019
18:59Which one, Abu Hamad?
19:00The family of the murdered Emojis Baker are flawed.
19:02What was he doing, raising a gun emoji to hide something in the chat?
19:04Yes, a court in France
19:06I sentenced a young man to three months
19:08Tabed threatened my girlfriend
19:10The evidence in the case was a gun emoji.
19:12No, this is with prior knowledge, that's it.
19:14Qafsh Taiping remains with prior secrets
19:16She didn't understand any words.
19:17Ask Farid El Deeb
19:18neglect
19:19Mainina
19:20In another case in 2017
19:21In the state of Misshou Cities
19:23Regarding the ruling on the crime
19:24Whoever kills a second-degree non-educated person
19:26To kill with premeditation and malice aforethought
19:28Because the killer added in a message to the victim
19:32This emoji
19:32O Son of God, adorn us
19:33Which the court considered to be a premeditated threat
19:36This is a killer, the proof is out
19:38Make me an emoji with Xs over the eye
19:40By God, what's up, man?
19:41Shall I tell you, Hadizi?
19:42These heinous incidents
19:44Because of these emojis and these rulings
19:47Apple has changed the gun emoji.
19:50The pistol emoji
19:51And it is pressuring Microsoft
19:52Against adding the Rival emoji
19:54Which is the gun
19:55Meanwhile, during the Silk Road Market case
19:57In which Ross L. Bright was accused
19:58By managing illegal loads on the dark web
20:01These include smuggling, money laundering, and drugs.
20:03Her $213 million plan
20:06He tried to support his case.
20:08The one whose entire career was spent on electronic conversations
20:10The claim was that he was reading the conversations aloud.
20:12And he was ignoring the emojis
20:14Which might mess up the text with us
20:15Or change it completely
20:16If I told you to do another neutralization and give me a face
20:18I'm still joking
20:19By God, it's a joke.
20:20Although Ross was ultimately convicted
20:22However, Judge Catherine B. Forrest
20:24She confirmed that the emojis in these cases
20:26An undeniable part
20:27Esperanto language
20:28Which began as a hope for uniting the world peacefully
20:31Ironically
20:31Its last musical use
20:33He was in US Army training exercises
20:36As an enlightened language
20:36Imagine Aziz making a song to raise awareness about alcohol.
20:39So, a young man finds that her perfume is sweet for the head at celebrations while he's trying alcohol.
20:43Here are the emojis, my dears.
20:44Which emerged as the simplest form of communication
20:46He hoped to unite users from all cultures.
20:49It also managed, like all languages, to create cultural and semantic differences.
20:53And ultimately, it became a symbol of threat, harassment, and intimidation.
20:56Of course, Lina, Abu Hamid
20:57What else do we need to invent to make humans stop being creatures?
20:59A restaurant for languages is beneficial, but pictures are not.
21:01So, Abu Hamid, did the emojis get you or did you fail?
21:03One last exit, and I'll be back with the dramatic flair.
21:07In July 1945, during World War II
21:11Allies gathered at the Potsdam Conference
21:13They demanded Japan's unconditional surrender.
21:15It is either immediate destruction
21:17While journalists are pressuring the Japanese Prime Minister
21:20Kantar Suzuki to respond to them
21:22Their actions are something I will never forget for the rest of my life, my dear.
21:24Moko Sadsu
21:25Unbelievable, Abu Hamid! I didn't know he was so brazen.
21:28And what audacity!
21:29What were you doing, and what was she doing?
21:30This means no comment
21:31I didn't open the message.
21:33There's no such thing as not seeing the message in this day and age.
21:35The sight of her lips was like a match that hadn't opened
21:37But the surprise is that the word "lan anko sadsu"
21:39It has many meanings in Japanese.
21:41All are derived from the word "deaf".
21:43That's why
21:43News agencies will choose to translate the word
21:46Not worth responding to
21:50It's not worth commenting on.
21:51It means, as my dear would say,
21:53okay
21:53So you are translating it, he is tired
21:55He tells you
21:55okay
21:56Just like I'm telling you, my dear
21:57Do what you love
21:57Maybe there's no surrender involved.
21:58What you see is working
21:59It's possible there's no threat involved, nor is there a midwife.
22:00Do what you love
22:01For example
22:01I honestly don't know what he meant.
22:03But what happened was that after ten days
22:05America will drop the atomic bomb
22:07On Hiroshima and Nagansan
22:09And it announces the entry of the whole world
22:11The Age of Horror Genre
22:12And my dear friend
22:12It might be a mistranslation of the word
22:16She described it as
22:19The worst translation mistake
22:20And it created a new, terrifying force for humanity.
22:23The mistake might be seen as being with the Japanese government.
22:25What wasn't clear
22:25Or the journalists' incorrect translation
22:27Or charged in the reply
22:29But perhaps we imagined that Japan
22:31If she had replied in English, for example
22:33And America understands
22:33Her bomb wasn't thrown
22:35In her study
22:38Why isn't language a means of communication?
22:40Ansi Ripoll says
22:41Perhaps the worst mistake we made
22:43If we dealt with the language
22:44Communication is essential
22:46Therefore, if we limit the system's chatter
22:49Among humans
22:49All communication problems will end
22:51And peace will prevail
22:52Wow
22:53While the language appeared simply
22:55As a need
22:56Med
22:56Because humans are complex creatures
22:58Graduation was chosen as part of her stingy ambition.
23:01In the form of words
23:02Humans decided to reconstruct their brains.
23:04His feelings and thoughts
23:06Very complex
23:07So that you may prostrate yourself in words that fit the measure of what he can say.
23:09No matter how much our languages and translations develop
23:11The complexity that distinguishes us as humans
23:13Joanna is still
23:14And I need a thousand ways to communicate
23:15In order to reach the light
23:16Alongside the language
23:17That's why, my dear, we weren't satisfied with it.
23:18While we created countless laws that cannot be obtained
23:20To organize our presence
23:21And we communicated with the other
23:23That's why
23:23simplest
23:23And the latest inventions
23:25The one who reduced communication to a single image
23:26Emoji costume
23:27It has turned into a legal, philosophical, and humanitarian problem.
23:30All attempts to unify the language
23:31Esperanto costume
23:32It began with a dream
23:33It ended in a nightmare
23:34Because it tried to free humanity from the prison of nationalisms
23:36Instead of freeing it
23:37Patterned all human diversity
23:39In a prison of uniform words
23:40Human beings are greater than that.
23:41And bigger than that
23:42And history tells us
23:43People are fighting
23:44Because of the difference
23:45So the following too
23:45Dozens of stories tell us about the fears of humans
23:48They fought each other there
23:49Despite their similarity in color
23:51Language, ethnicity, and religion
23:52That's why
23:53naive
23:53If we imagine that removing differences between people
23:56He will make paradise on earth
23:57Because the opposite might be true.
23:59Because firstly, this is impossible
24:00And Sanya, because if we prefer, we will try to eliminate the differences.
24:03This is its essence
24:04Confirmation that the difference
24:05This inevitably leads to conflict.
24:07Implicit confirmation that we are not alike
24:09We still have to fight each other.
24:10While the solution might be within our grasp for a group of people
24:13Humans are a very diverse group of races.
24:16Religions, colors, and inclinations
24:17Humans have an instinctive tendency to seek closeness to those who resemble them.
24:20And that's what creates societies.
24:21And the identities we belong to
24:22And humans need this
24:24Finally, my dear friend, I'd like to conclude with a quote from a French writer, poet, and clergyman.
24:27François Finlot
24:33This man, my dear, says
24:37All wars are civil wars.
24:39Because every human being's sense of belonging to humanity is greater than their sense of belonging to nationality.
24:43I hope, my dear, that you will see the previous cases.
24:45See the upcoming cases
24:46A broad look at the sources
24:47If we're on YouTube
24:48Subscribe to the channel
24:49Dear viewer, my cheek
24:50Two dots above the star
24:51Who is the dear one who discovered what surprised me in the world of emojis?
24:53The emoji is "Our Father, the Sun".
24:55This cool, stylish emoji is the same as the annoying, nasty one with the glasses.
24:58Did you see how Aziz Al-Tarshat makes a difference?
24:59But my dear