If you have an iPhone, chances you've used an emoji or two in a text. But are you actually using them correctly? There are a few popular ones that are often misinterpreted, but here are their official meanings via Unicode.
1. Folded Hands
If you've been using this much-debated icon to signify a high five, you're wrong. This actually is meant to be a person with folded hands — which implies praying or bowing.
2. Japanese Ogre
The red-faced angry emoji isn't a mask, the devil, or a character from Where the Wild Things Are — it's a Japanese ogre.

8. Grinning Face With Smiling Eyes
This definitely looks like an awkward, uncomfortable grimace, but it technically is a super-happy smiling emoji.

14. Face With OK Gesture
OK, I admittedly had no idea what this actually was, but according to Unicode, it is a woman making an "OK gesture." Does anybody actually do this when trying to signal that they're OK?
15. Name Badge
This doesn't actually represent fire, though it certainly looks like flames — instead, it means "name badge."
16. Person Bowing Deeply
This guy looks pretty stressed out, but he is, in fact, bowing deeply to show how sorry he is. Perhaps he is apologizing for being such a confusing emoji.