;)
eyes/semicolon;
mouth/closing parentheses)
A 'smiley face' at the end of the text he sent you means he is happy to be in contact with you.
It is not known when the computer graphics smiley face started out or who created it, but a sideways version was formed as a colon followed by a hyphen and end parenthesis symbol. This form of the smiley face was "created" by a professor at Carnegie Mellon University by the name of Scott E. Fahlman in September of 1982.
You write in a flirtateous way and at the end of your messages always add some sort of smiley face.
An example of an emoticon could be :) which represents a smiling face. It is often used to indicate happiness or positivity in online communication.
The letter "j" at the end of a sentence actually started its life as a smiley face in some Microsoft program. For example, MS Outlook automatically turns :-) into a graphic smiley ☺ by using a special font set called WingDings. When the message is read on a system without the WingDings fonts--such as a Mac or a phone--the same character becomes a "j" in any normal text font. The errant "j" sometimes appears in the middle of the sentence as well, but it's less noticeable there. See the Related Links for more on this.
The reason for that is because they are cowards. They just want to get rid of you. If they tell you face to face then they need you to understand why. But usually if they break up with you by a text it could mean that he never really cared about you.
At the end Zane (or Proxy, i forgot) dies by Smiley and also, at the end you realise Ashley is still alive;
M. B. Smiley High School ended in 2008.
In the font wingdings, L is an unhappy emoticon. Sometimes I was getting J's at the end, and that's a smiley face in wingdings , so I'm pretty sure that's what it is.
I thought I had it figured out, and so I went looking to see & I was right. Have you ever typed a smiley :-), and whatever program you were in automatically made it into a smiley? Well, sometimes the code that makes that happen gets lost as it goes through the various email programs and ends up as just a "J" Update for precision: - Office use MS Word as HTML e-mail editor - The "smiley" is replaced by a Winding font character. - The uppercase "J" is a smiley in the Winding character set. - The "J" will appear each time the text is kept but the font info is lost.
Try to arrange more face-to-face meetings.
The cox at the end of a text message basically means the end.