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Douglas also suggested:
e-4D6 HIGH HEELED SHOE: perhaps HIGH-HEELED SHOE might be better
I replied:
We are planning to rename this one WOMANS PUMPS: [link to issue 60]
And Rick replied to that:
Even worse. I like Doug Davidson's suggestion better than that.
Original comment by markus.icu
on 7 Jan 2009 at 11:09
Can we decide to go with HIGH-HEELED SHOE on this one? Unless I hear otherwise,
it
will be HIGH-HEELED SHOE.
Original comment by katmomoi
on 12 Jan 2009 at 9:47
HIGH-HEELED SHOE works for me.
Original comment by markus.icu
on 12 Jan 2009 at 9:49
A change to HIGH-HEELED SHOE was made in r97. We will address the remaining
suggestions in this issue.
Original comment by katmomoi
on 12 Jan 2009 at 10:44
My replies to the items except the 10 issues concerning faces. They will be
dealt with separately.
====
e-4E2 BILL WITH YEN SIGN: is this clearly distinguished from an
enclosed yen sign?
--> Yes. e-4e2 is an oblong check with the Yen sign on it. It is not a simple
enclosed Yen sign.
[...]
e-02A CLOCK SYMBOL: none of the other clock variants have "symbol" in
their names; perhaps just CLOCK would suffice
--> We could rename this to CLOCK FACE SYMBOL to be consistent with the rest of
the series. I think 'SYMBOL'is needed to indicate the general nature of
this Emoji.
e-198 HAIR NEEDING A CUT: the original significance seems to be
something like "hairdresser" or "beauty parlor"; perhaps this could be
shorted to just HAIRCUT
--> HAIRCUT will be fine. Add a note about beauty parlor. We also need a design
note that this Emoji needs to show a female.
e-1AC RED FACED OGRE: names probably shouldn't mention color unless
it's really necessary--perhaps this could be JAPANESE OGRE or ONI
DEMON or something similar
--> The Japanese name refers to "Namahage", a local yea-end event/tradition in
Akita. Namahage faces can be red or blue and they are not necessary ogres.
I propose to change this to:
ONI-FACED DEMON (or lessd preferred OGRE-FACED DEMON).
e-1B0 EXTRATERRESTRIAL ALIEN: perhaps ALIEN HEAD or ALIEN FACE would
be more consistent
--> The KDDI Emoji shows an alien ship while the Softbank version shows an
alien face. Both are meant to represent an extraterrestrial. We should keep the
current naming.
e-1B5 GUARDSMAN: the first female Beefeater was appointed last year,
so perhaps something ungendered like GUARD or BEEFEATER might be better
--> We rejected BEEFEATER because it is too specific. GUARDSMAN is used for
both male and female members of the military guard. I propose to keep this as
is.
e-1E1 HONEY BEE: this is more usually one word, HONEYBEE
--> Agreed. Change to HONEYBEE
e-4B0 BLACK HOUSE, e-4B1 HOME: usually 'black' is used to distinguish
filled-in from open glyphs, but that doesn't seem to be the
distinction here
--> The docomo Emoji is filled but the other 2 Emoji are not. Need to discuss
this.
e-514 TWO JAPANESE FLAGS: perhaps CROSSED JAPANESE FLAGS instead
--> CROSSED JAPANESE FLAGS sounds OK to me and more descriptive. I suggest a
change to this naming.
e-519 GIRLS DOLLS FESTIVAL: the repeated 's' suffix seems awkward;
perhaps GIRLS DOLL FESTIVAL instead
--> I am OK with the suggested change. It sounds better.
e-51D JAPANESE SPARKLER: is this specifically Japanese, or would just
SPARKLER suffice?
--> Keep the current name. 線香花火 is a sparkler made in the shape of a
burning incense stick. This is a special type of fireworks that originated in
Japan.
e-520 DECORATIVE CONFETTI BALL: are there non-decorative confetti
balls? perhaps just CONFETTI BALL would suffice
--> Normally no. I am OK with CONFETTI BALL
e-530 LOUD SPEAKER: this is more usually one word, LOUDSPEAKER
--. Change to LOUDSPEAKER
e-B7F SYMBOLS SIGN: generally 'sign' seems to be used for an actual
physical sign, 'symbol' for a written symbol; for consistency with the
surrounding characters, this would have to be SYMBOLS SYMBOL
--> Yes. Or else simply SYMBOLS
e-553 FOOT PRINTS: this is more usually one word, FOOTPRINTS
--> Agreed. Chaneg to FOOTPRINTS
e-805 BLACK SILK HAT: perhaps TOP HAT instead
--> The Japanese name is simply "Silk hat" and no mention of color. How about
SILK HAT or TOP HAT?
e-80F A DIE: few other names have an article; if DIE is ambiguous,
perhaps SIX-SIDED DIE would do
--> To avoid an article, how about GAME DIE. SIX_SIDED DIE sounds good, too.
But is there any other kind of dice?
e-972 MEAT ON A BONE: perhaps this could omit the article, and just
be MEAT ON BONE
--> I am OK with changing this to MEAT ON BONE
e-974 ROASTED SWEET POTATO: perhaps just SWEET POTATO would suffice
--> No change. Yakiimo (焼き芋) refers to **roasted** potato of a certain
type.
e-97C LOLLYPOP: this is more usually LOLLIPOP
--> Merriam Webster's 11th Collegiate English Dictionary has LOLLIPOP as the
main entery and LOLLYPOP as a vriant. Will change to more common LOLLIPOP
Original comment by katmomoi
on 15 Jan 2009 at 9:57
About e-80F A DIE: Yes, there are other dice with more faces, often used in
adventure
games. E.g., http://images.google.com/images?q=12+sided+die
Depending on how specific this wants to be, GAME DIE or SIX SIDED DIE could
work.
(Unicode character names seem to usually omit the hyphen, as in U+2736 SIX
POINTED
BLACK STAR.)
Original comment by markus.icu
on 15 Jan 2009 at 10:27
e-530 LOUDSPEAKER - this looks like an outdoors public announcement
loudspeaker so its not wrong, but it
doesn't contrast well with MEGAPHONE.
http://images.google.com/images?gbv=2&hl=en&q=loudspeaker&btnG=Search+Images
e-52F MEGAPHONE - this is an old-fashioned shouting cone, wheras modern
hand-held megaphones are
electric and look like LOUDSPEAKER with a pistol grip.
http://images.google.com/images?gbv=2&hl=en&q=megaphone&btnG=Search+Images
PROPOSAL: Draw a modern indoors hi-fi loudspeaker for LOUDSPEAKER & use the
existing LOUDSPEAKER
glyph with a pistol grip for e-52F MEGAPHONE as the pistol grip is distinct to
this usage.
Original comment by loft...@apple.com
on 15 Jan 2009 at 11:21
Apple/Google:
e-328 FACE WITH LOOK OF TRIUMPH: this would be more consistent as
TRIUMPHANT FACE
-> no change
e-329 FACE WINKING WITH STUCK OUT TONGUE: this would be more
consistent as WINKING FACE WITH STUCK OUT TONGUE
-> ok
e-32B FACE WITH YUMMY LOOK: this sounds odd, but I'm not sure what
would be better; perhaps SATISFIED FACE
-> FACE SAVORING DELICIOUS FOOD
e-32E FACE WITH A MASK: this would be more consistent as FACE WITH MASK
-> ok
e-339 LITTLE CRYING FACE: 'little' seems inappropriate here, since
the face isn't little; perhaps just CRYING FACE would be enough to
distinguish it from e-33A
-> ok
e-33B PALE FACE: this would be more consistent as FEARFUL FACE
-> ok
e-341 SHOCKED FACE WITH SCREAM: perhaps just SHOCKED FACE or
SCREAMING FACE would suffice
-> FACE SCREAMING IN FEAR
e-343 SMIRKY FACE: this would be more consistent as SMIRKING FACE
-> ok
e-345 DISAPPOINTED BUT RELIEVED FACE: this might be more consistent
as DISAPPOINTED FACE WITH COLD SWEAT
-> no change because of Japanese semantics
e-35A PERSON MAKING POUTING FACE this might be more consistent as
PERSON WITH POUTING FACE
-> ok
Original comment by markus.icu
on 16 Jan 2009 at 9:54
Images of Monopoly House
http://images.google.com/images?gbv=2&hl=en&q=monopoly+house&btnG=Search+Images
Original comment by loft...@apple.com
on 16 Jan 2009 at 10:32
Apple/Google:
Go with Kat's reply, except for the following:
e-02A CLOCK SYMBOL: none of the other clock variants have "symbol" in
their names; perhaps just CLOCK would suffice
--> We could rename this to CLOCK FACE SYMBOL to be consistent with the rest of
the
series. I think 'SYMBOL'is needed to indicate the general nature of
this Emoji.
-> change to ALARM CLOCK and change the glyph
e-1AC RED FACED OGRE: names probably shouldn't mention color unless
it's really necessary--perhaps this could be JAPANESE OGRE or ONI
DEMON or something similar
--> The Japanese name refers to "Namahage", a local yea-end event/tradition in
Akita.
Namahage faces can be red or blue and they are not necessary ogres.
I propose to change this to:
ONI-FACED DEMON (or lessd preferred OGRE-FACED DEMON).
-> change to OGRE
-> Annotate: "In Japanese, Oni"
-> also change e-1AD LONG NOSED GOBLIN to GOBLIN
-> Annotate: "In Japanese, Tengu"
e-4B0 BLACK HOUSE, e-4B1 HOME: usually 'black' is used to distinguish
filled-in from open glyphs, but that doesn't seem to be the
distinction here
--> The docomo Emoji is filled but the other 2 Emoji are not. Need to discuss
this.
-> e-4B0: HOUSE BUILDING
-> e-4B1: HOUSE WITH YARD
e-51D JAPANESE SPARKLER: is this specifically Japanese, or would just
SPARKLER suffice?
--> Keep the current name. 線香花火 is a sparkler made in the shape of a
burning
incense stick. This is a special type of fireworks that originated in
Japan.
-> FIREWORK SPARKLER
e-530 LOUD SPEAKER: this is more usually one word, LOUDSPEAKER
--. Change to LOUDSPEAKER
-> handled with issue 101
e-B7F SYMBOLS SIGN: generally 'sign' seems to be used for an actual
physical sign, 'symbol' for a written symbol; for consistency with the
surrounding characters, this would have to be SYMBOLS SYMBOL
--> Yes. Or else simply SYMBOLS
-> SYMBOLS INPUT SYMBOL
-> also change e-B80 ENGLISH LANGUAGE SYMBOL to LATIN LETTERS SYMBOL
e-805 BLACK SILK HAT: perhaps TOP HAT instead
--> The Japanese name is simply "Silk hat" and no mention of color. How about
SILK
HAT or TOP HAT?
-> TOP HAT
e-80F A DIE: few other names have an article; if DIE is ambiguous,
perhaps SIX-SIDED DIE would do
--> To avoid an article, how about GAME DIE. SIX_SIDED DIE sounds good, too.
But is
there any other kind of dice?
-> GAME DIE
Original comment by markus.icu
on 16 Jan 2009 at 11:00
Original comment by markus.icu
on 20 Jan 2009 at 11:45
Fixed in r131. Made agreed on changes in comment 5 and comment 10.
Also provided/modified description and design notes.
Original comment by katmomoi
on 23 Jan 2009 at 12:03
r131 looks good, but it's missing the changes for face symbols from comment 8.
Please
make those changes as well.
Original comment by markus.icu
on 23 Jan 2009 at 9:17
Thanks for pointing out the omissions.
r132 fixes all the issues mentioned in comment 8.
Original comment by katmomoi
on 23 Jan 2009 at 10:05
thanks!
Original comment by markus.icu
on 23 Jan 2009 at 10:47
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
markus.icu
on 7 Jan 2009 at 10:44