"How do I tell the cats?" - the world reacts to #Brexit online

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This is the meme you're looking for. (Tim Hirst) #EUrefImage source, @PadraigBelton

Brexit was the top Twitter topic by some distance on Friday morning, generating more than 2m tweets and trending highest in countries across the world.

Social media users reacted with a mixture of surprise, gloating and wry humour.

Remain plea by unlikely EU pundit Lindsay Lohan

"No matter what the outcome, Brexit polls demonstrate how quickly half of any population can be convinced to vote against itself. Quite a lesson"Image source, @Snowden

The most retweeted post was from US whistleblower Edward Snowden, who said the referendum held lessons for people all over the world.

"We ran out of paper towels. Guess we can just use these" £20 notesImage source, @FullFrontalSamB

Several tweeters riffed on the plunging British pound.

"+100% spike in UK searches for "getting an Irish passport" after #Brexit vote"Image source, @GoogleTrends

Google reported a sharp rise in UK-based internet searches for ways of obtaining a passport for the Republic of Ireland, which is in the EU.

"Fox News - a little confused" (Fox News reported that the UK was leaving the UN)Image source, @kileysky

Sharp-eyed viewers of Fox News spotted that it initially reported that the UK had voted to leave the United Nations.

"How do I tell them?? #Brexit"Image source, @joffley

There was consternation among europhile cats.

"Can't think about #Brexit without thinking about this"Image source, @DartmouthDerek

One Canadian suggested a historical context.

"Pakistan should welcome British refugees now"Image source, @awaiskhp
"I just realised Adele's Hello was about Brexit"Image source, @AisiTaisiDemo

Jokes in Pakistan and India focused on the potential for a flood of British migrants to the subcontinent and a possible hidden meaning in British singer Adele's lyrics.

Heard in Baghdad: "I never thought Britain would break up before #Iraq."Image source, @bencnn

War-weary Iraqis expressed wry surprise.

"The German for attempting to improve something but actually making it worse is verschlimmbessern #brexit"Image source, @thegermanfor

Lovers of schadenfreude - taking pleasure in someone else's misfortune - were treated to a new German compound verb - verschlimmbessern.

"After #Brexit ppl dont realise that it will be followed by Grexit etc"Image source, @SheikhItHaris

And could "Departugal" or "Czechout" be next?

'Those going to the UK to study will be pleased'

On China's Twitterlike Sina Weibo platform, the hashtag #UKEUReferendum# gained more than 85m views.

Some said the result showed the limits of democratic processes.

"The whole world is watching the Brexit vote. I think socialism is still the better system," one user wrote.

"Although a lot of people have mocked us for not having the right to vote and flaunted the democratic systems of other countries. Although our country's political system is not perfect, a referendum in China definitely wouldn't work. A referendum requires educated individuals with independent judgement," user Horse Dog God wrote, with a series of smirking emojis.

Weibo post in Chinese reading: "#UKEUReferendum# Hollywood predicted it all long ago" with a film poster for Independence Day: ResurgenceImage source, @Y大调奏鸣曲
Image caption,

"#UKEUReferendum# Hollywood predicted it all long ago", this post says

Some users started sharing the poster for the latest "Independence Day" film and wondering whether Scotland would vote to leave the UK.

Others had more personal concerns.

"Brexit brexit. Those going to the UK to study will be pleased - the pound is going to fall," user DaisyBucket said.