Company: Others
Created by: federica.masante
Number of Blossarys: 31
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- Hindi (HI)
- Italian (IT)
- Serbian (SR)
- Spanish (ES)
- Czech (CS)
- Hungarian (HU)
- Arabic (AR)
- French (FR)
- Turkish (TR)
- Greek (EL)
- Dutch (NL)
- Bulgarian (BG)
- Estonian (ET)
- Korean (KO)
- Swedish (SV)
- English, UK (UE)
- Chinese, Hong Kong (ZH)
- Slovak (SK)
- Lithuanian (LT)
- Norwegian Bokmål (NO)
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- Portuguese, Brazilian (PB)
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In Saussurean semiotics, the term signification refers to the relationship between the signifier and the signified.
A term sometimes used to refer to the physical or material form of the sign (e.g. words, images, sounds, acts or objects). For some commentators this means the same as the signifier (which for ...
A sign is a meaningful unit which is interpreted as 'standing for' something other than itself. Signs are found in the physical form of words, images, sounds, acts or objects (this physical form is ...
In some semiotic triangles, this refers to the sense made of the sign (what Peirce called the interpretant).
Within transmission models of communication, these terms are used to refer to the participants in acts of communication (communication being presented as a linear process of 'sending' 'messages' to ...
Loosely defined as 'the study of signs' or 'the theory of signs', what Saussure called 'semiology' was: 'a science which studies the role of signs as part of social life'. Saussure's use of the term ...
Peirce's triad is a semiotic triangle; other semiotic triangles can also be found. The most common alternative changes only the unfamiliar Peircean terms, and consists of the sign vehicle, the sense ...