Are memes a love language?
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Oftentimes, memes are a better shorthand for what someone’s trying to say, or better yet, what they’re trying to make someone else feel. Where words alone fail, memes succeed in articulating the infinite wonder and weirdness of human emotion. These microcosms of metaphor are the internet’s one true love language.
What does my love language is not having to ask mean?
If your partner’s love language is acts of service: They want someone who is going to understand when they are overwhelmed and do tangible things to make their life easier—without them necessarily having to ask.
Is meme the Internet’s One True Love Language?
These microcosms of metaphor are the internet’s one true love language. “Meme” comes from the ancient Greek μίμημα, pronounced mīmēma, meaning “imitated thing.”
Why do we love memes so much?
Oftentimes, memes are a better shorthand for what someone’s trying to say, or better yet, what they’re trying to make someone else feel. Where words alone fail, memes succeed in articulating the infinite wonder and weirdness of human emotion. These microcosms of metaphor are the internet’s one true love language.
Does everyone have a “love language?
The premise: everyone has a “love language” that signifies their preferred method of expressing and experiencing affection. Appropriately enough, there are five main categories of meme meaning that directly correlate to the love languages. But I made them, not Gary:
What are the 5 neurodivergent love languages?
I love this fun tweet on the five neurodivergent love languages from the always insightful Myth. The five neurodivergent love languages: infodumping, parallel play, support swapping, Please Crush My Soul Back Into My Body, and “I found this cool rock/button/leaf/etc and thought you would like it” I’ll expand on each with selected quotes.