Free: 1 LOT (2) HASHTAG Mark IRON ON PATCHES Embroidered Adhesive Applique - Other Clothing - Listia.com Auctions for Free Stuff

FREE: 1 LOT (2) HASHTAG Mark IRON ON PATCHES Embroidered Adhesive Applique

1 LOT (2) HASHTAG Mark IRON ON PATCHES Embroidered Adhesive Applique
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Description

The listing, 1 LOT (2) HASHTAG Mark IRON ON PATCHES Embroidered Adhesive Applique has ended.

About 2.25 x 1.5 Inches Each (TINY)
NEW, Never used adhesive back, ready for iron on!


A hashtag is a type of metadata tag used on social networks such as Twitter and other microblogging services, allowing users to apply dynamic, user-generated tagging that makes it possible for others to easily find messages with a specific theme or content; it allows easy, informal markup of folk taxonomy without need of any formal taxonomy or markup language.
Users create and use hashtags by placing the number sign or pound sign # (also known as the hash character) in front of a string of alphanumeric characters, usually a word or unspaced phrase, in or at the end of a message. The hashtag may contain letters, digits, and underscores. Searching for that hashtag will yield each message that has been tagged with it. A hashtag archive is consequently collected into a single stream under the same hashtag. For example, on the photo-sharing service Instagram, the hashtag #bluesky allows users to find all the posts that have been tagged using that hashtag. Because of its widespread use, hashtag was added to the Oxford English Dictionary in June 2014. The term hashtag can also refer to the hash symbol itself when used in the context of a hashtag. Formal taxonomies can be developed from the folk taxonomy rendered machine-readable by the markup that hashtags provide; this process is called folksonomy.The US pound sign, number sign or hash symbol "#" is often used in information technology to highlight a special meaning. ("Pound sign" in the UK means "£"; "#" is called hash, gate, and occasionally octothorpe.) In 1970, for example, the number sign was used to denote immediate address mode in the assembly language of the PDP-11 when placed next to a symbol or a number. In 1978, Brian Kernighan and Dennis Ritchie used # in the C programming language for special keywords that had to be processed first by the C preprocessor. In the 1986 SGML standard, ISO 8879:1986 (q.v.), #
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1 LOT (2) HASHTAG Mark IRON ON PATCHES Embroidered Adhesive Applique is in the Clothing, Shoes & Accessories | Other Clothing category