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Canadians are twice as raunchy as other groups, according to the report, although U.S. English speakers are the top users of the eggplant.

As mentioned, we really love that poop, too.

Canadians also apparently love pizza 🍕, using that emoji more than double the average amount. Both Canadians and Australians use the coffee emoji ☕️ more than all other groups at more than double the average.

When it comes to sports-based emoji, Canadians are nearly three times as likely to use them, with cycling being the most common sport represented 🚴. We also use money-related emoji nearly twice as much as other groups 💵.

You might think that Canadians would also lead in kvetching about the weather, but Russian speakers are far and away the biggest users of the snowflake emoji ❄️.

Russian speakers at least appear to be keeping warm, using three times more romantic emoji 💏😍 than the average. That’s nearly twice as much as any other language. French users, however, send the most hearts at four times the average. It’s the only language where hearts beat out happy faces as the top category.

Canadians place second in the use of LGBT emoji 👬👭, with Americans leading the category. Vietnamese and French speakers use them the least.

Across the board, happy faces 😄 are the most popular category of emoji, accounting for 44.8 per cent of all emoji used. Those are followed by sad faces, hearts, hand gestures 🙌 and romantic emoji. The least popular category is reading materials (like newspapers 📰), film, travel, tools and meat 🍗 (Americans lead in this category, however).