From the humble thumbs up to the cheeky aubergine, there's now an emoji for almost every situation.
But how well do you really know your emojis?
With over 3,900 characters to choose from, the fine details might be more challenging to recall than you think.
This fiendishly difficult test includes 10 questions that will reveal exactly how good your emoji recall is.
Some of the questions test your knowledge of emoji colours, while others will check if you can remember specific features.
You'll also be quizzed on whether or not certain emojis exist at all - an example of the so-called Mandela effect.
This phenomenon - named after the false belief that Nelson Mandela died in prison during the 1980s - occurs when a group of people believe something occurred when it did not.
So, do you know what colour the seahorse is, or how many fingers are on the nail-painting hand? Take the test below to find out.
Some of the most baffling questions in the quiz ask if you remember emojis that never actually existed.
This includes a woman at the spa with cucumbers on her eyes - a character many social media users are convinced has existed at one point.
In a viral video on TikTok, one user wrote: 'Please tell me somebody remembers the emoji of a girl wearing her hair in a towel and she has cucumbers over her eyes like she is at the spa!
'I cannot find it and now I'm realizing it doesn't exist but I remember it so vividly, is this just me?'
While some existing emojis have some of the spa emoji's characteristics, there has never been an official emoji matching this description.
The 'Woman in Steamy Room' emoji on iOS features a woman wearing a towel on her head but with no cucumbers on her eyes.
Likewise, the 'Person Getting Massage' emoji is similar but misses a few key details.
This emoji could be an example of the Mandela effect - a form of collective false memory caused by the way our brains tend to mix up information from the past.
Some existing emojis are similar to the description of the 'missing emoji'. The 'Woman in Steamy Room' emoji on iOS features a woman wearing a towel on her head but with no cucumbers on her eyes.
What is the Mandela Effect?
The Mandela Effect is the strange phenomenon in which many people remember something in a particular way, but are wrong.
The name was coined by paranormal enthusiast Fiona Broome, who was convinced she remembered Nelson Mandela dying in prison in the 1980s.
In fact, Mandela's death was not until 2013, despite Ms Broome and many others recalling seeing his funeral on TV in the 1980s.
If someone remembers seeing a vaguely similar image and then is told that this spa emoji exists, their mind will fill in the gaps and create a false memory of seeing it.
Since our memories aren't great for small details, something like whether an emoji has cucumbers over their eyes can easily be misremembered.
Proposed sources of the false memory included a cartoon icon from the TV show Lizzie McGuire or the cover of the children's book series 'American Girl'.
The most popular suggestion is that this was an icon from the life simulator game Bitlife, which was advertised widely across social media.
Previously, social media users became convinced that Bitlife was the source of another popular 'missing emoji'.
TikTok users were certain that they remembered an emoji showing a person dressed as a robber with a black and white striped shirt.
In one TikTok video, a user even went through a first-generation iPad to see if it was an older emoji that had since been deleted.
Earlier this year, social media users were convinced they remembered a 'robber emoji'. The search for this missing emoji sparked speculation that it might have originated from the Bitlife life-simulation game. However, no evidence for this theory has been found.
Since the robber emoji could not be found anywhere, it was widely circulated that Bitlife was the origin of the elusive 'robber emoji'.
However, there was never any evidence to show that the robber icon or emoji was part of the Bitlife game.
Likewise, while there is a 'spa' activity in Bitlife, there is no icon associated with it that could be the source of any confusion.
The most and least popular emojis in the UK
Most popular
- Red Heart
- Face with Tears of Joy
- Sparkles
- Check Mark Button
- Fire
- Eyes
- Smiling Face with Smiling Eyes
- Star
- Party Popper
- Backhand Index Pointing Down
Least popular
- Persevering Face
- Pig
- Lying Face
- Broken Chain
- Hushed Face
- Singapore Flag
- Pause Button
- Backhand Index Pointing Right: Medium Skin Tone
- Flexed Biceps: Medium Skin Tone
- Person Gesturing No