MusicTaylor Swift

Emoji Clues: Which Taylor Swift Song Is This?

Trust your gut; the title’s hiding in plain emojis.

Emoji Clues: Which Taylor Swift Song Is This?AI Image
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About This Quiz

Welcome to the jungle gym of emojis—twenty-six little glyph piles itching to morph into Taylor anthems. Spot the police car after a crossed-out body? That’s “no body, no crime.” Lavender heart drifting through haze? You know the drill.

We sprinkled in decoys that look right until your brain screams nah, nice try. Glide from acoustic porch swings to midnight synth tunnels without spilling your latte.

Best hack: read the pictures out loud like bad poetry, then slam the buzzer before doubt moves in. Bag a flawless run and you’re glittering like the mirrorball; stumble and blame autocorrect. Snacks mandatory—win stickers, brag, repeat, sleep later.

1/26

1. Can you guess the song?

[B] Bad Blood | Thumbs-down signals “bad,” the drop means “blood.” The Kendrick Lamar remix took this 1989 single to No.1 on the Hot 100, with a cameo-stuffed video built like an action trailer.

2/26

2. Can you guess the song?

[D] Girl At Home | Girl arrowing to a house reads literally. Originally on Red’s deluxe, the Taylor’s Version update swapped in glossy electro touches while preserving the don’t-call-me ethics lesson.

3/26

3. Can you guess the song?

[A] Illicit Affairs | X plus couple screams “forbidden.” A folklore deep cut that whispers rules for secret meetings, then detonates in that snarled bridge fans love to scream in quiet venues.

4/26

4. Can you guess the song?

[C] Picture To Burn | Camera plus flames equals “picture to burn.” One of the snarky early singles from Taylor’s debut era, complete with country bite and a music-video revenge storyboard.

5/26

5. Can you guess the song?

[B] No Body No Crime | Crossed-out body and police car match the title’s logic. The Haim collab turns a classic murder ballad into suburban olive-garden noir on folklore’s sister record.

6/26

6. Can you guess the song?

[A] Lavender Haze | Purple heart plus haze. Album-opener on Midnights, named after a phrase heard in Mad Men. Sonically gauzy, lyrically protective of a relationship under neon scrutiny.

7/26

7. Can you guess the song?

[D] Champagne Problems | Bottle and bride emoji set up the proposal gone sideways. evermore’s campus-steps story is famous for its cliff-face bridge and the empathy twist in the final verse.

8/26

8. Can you guess the song?

[C] Dress | One emoji, one word. A reputation slow-burn where the “golden tattoo” line became fan shorthand for private-goes-public moments. Synths stay hushed so the confession lands.

9/26

9. Can you guess the song?

[A] Sad Beautiful Tragic | Three moods in a row. Red’s lullaby train-rhythm track drifts through late-night regret; the title’s hyphenless stack mirrors the song’s slow-motion heartbreak.

10/26

10. Can you guess the song?

[B] Invisible String | Dotted-line face implies unseen; thread nails “string.” Folklore reframes destiny via mythic cords and color callbacks, even nodding to yogurt shop dates that fans decoded.

11/26

11. Can you guess the song?

[C] King Of My Heart | Crowned figure plus heart. reputation’s late-album surge features drum samples that drop out pre-chorus, then slam back like the moment feelings stop being theoretical.

12/26

12. Can you guess the song?

[D] Clean | Soap says it all. 1989’s closer with Imogen Heap trades guitars for airy electronics; the rain-after-storm metaphor made it a fan go-to for “I’m actually okay now.”

13/26

13. Can you guess the song?

[A] Haunted | One ghost, all strings. Speak Now’s symphonic drama stacks orchestration and a relentless drumline, turning a breakup into a Gothic chase through echoing hallways.

14/26

14. Can you guess the song?

[B] Castles Crumbling | Fortress plus collapse equals the title. A Speak Now (TV) vault duet with Hayley Williams, reflecting on public pedestal fatigue and reputational rubble with soft artillery.

15/26

15. Can you guess the song?

[D] White Horse | White circle and horse give the fairy-tale image. Fearless era heartbreaker that won two Grammys and proved her quietest songs often swing the biggest hammers.

16/26

16. Can you guess the song?

[C] Electric Touch | Lightning plus fingers almost meeting. Speak Now (TV) vault cut with Fall Out Boy leans pop-punk, guitars scraping like static before that hand-spark chorus lands.

17/26

17. Can you guess the song?

[A] London Boy | Union Jack and boy emoji spell it out. Lover name-checks Camden, Highgate, Bond Street, and black cabs, mapping a crush with tourist precision and local brag.

18/26

18. Can you guess the song?

[B] Forever And Always | Infinity plus infinity reads the phrase. Fearless track written hours before a TV taping; later reborn on Taylor’s Version with a sharper snare and cleaner bite.

19/26

19. Can you guess the song?

[C] Paper Rings | Paper plus double rings equals the hook. Lover’s pogo-stick tempo celebrates low-budget vows; the “I like shiny things…” line instantly turned into DIY wedding-sign culture.

20/26

20. Can you guess the song?

[D] Invisible | Dotted-line face again, no thread this time. A debut-era deep cut about unnoticed hallway love, showing teenage Taylor’s chord choices already loved clean, uncluttered space.

21/26

21. Can you guess the song?

[B] Superman | Caped figure means Superman. Speak Now deluxe track that sneaks comic-book imagery into country-pop phrasing; live, she’d throw in playful cape twirls for the outro.

22/26

22. Can you guess the song?

[A] Mr Perfectly Fine | Waving guy, 100, smiley—he’s “perfectly fine,” at least to himself. A Red (TV) vault bop that spiked iTunes, proving a 2008 hook can still slap in 2021.

23/26

23. Can you guess the song?

[C] Speak Now | Speech bubble plus soon arrow. The title track’s wedding-crash plot was inspired by a friend’s story; Taylor imagined choosing honesty over polite silence, verse by verse.

24/26

24. Can you guess the song?

[D] Death By A Thousand Cut | Skull, “hundred,” “zero,” and a blade point at “thousand cuts.” Lover’s breakup kaleidoscope was sparked by the film Someone Great; the live acoustic hits harder.

25/26

25. Can you guess the song?

[A] Starlight | Star plus light. Red’s Kennedy-inspired twirl captures a 1960s yacht-party blur; fun fact, the cover photo’s Polaroid aesthetic prefigured the 1989 visual era.

26/26

26. Can you guess the song?

[B] Timeless | Clock crossed out equals time erased. A Speak Now (TV) vault waltz imagining love that fits any century; fans made slideshow edits pairing the lyrics with grandparents’ photos.

Your Scorecard

Emoji Clues: Which Taylor Swift Song Is This?

  • Correct
  • Correct Rate
    %Avg Correct Rate
  • L1Difficulty Level
    1xPoints
  • Get Points
  • Perfect100%
  • Excellent≥90%
  • Very Good≥80%
  • Good≥70%
  • Passed≥60%
  • Failed≤50%

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