Meaning  

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*''[[Subculture: The Meaning of Style]]'' (1979) by [[Dick Hebdige]] *''[[Subculture: The Meaning of Style]]'' (1979) by [[Dick Hebdige]]
*''[[Taste: The Secret Meaning of Things]]'' (1991) by [[Stephen Bayley]] *''[[Taste: The Secret Meaning of Things]]'' (1991) by [[Stephen Bayley]]
 +==Etymology==
 +From Middle English ''mening, menyng'', equivalent to ''mean +‎ -ing''. Cognate with Scots ''mening'' (“intent, purpose, sense, meaning”), West Frisian ''miening'' (“opinion, mind”), Dutch ''mening'' (“view, opinion, judgement”), German ''Meinung'' (“opinion, view, mind, idea”), Danish and Swedish ''mening'' (“meaning, sense, sentence, opinion”), Icelandic ''meining'' (“meaning”).
==Citations== ==Citations==
*[['The question is,’ said Alice, ‘whether you can make words mean so many different things']] *[['The question is,’ said Alice, ‘whether you can make words mean so many different things']]
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* [[Logotherapy]] * [[Logotherapy]]
* [[Meaninglessness]] * [[Meaninglessness]]
 +* [[Opinion]]
* [[Nonsense]] * [[Nonsense]]
* [[Semantics]] for a general article on the study of meaning * [[Semantics]] for a general article on the study of meaning

Revision as of 22:36, 22 December 2013

Ars Memoriae: The Theatre (1619) - Robert Fludd  “In the illusory babels of language, an artist might advance specifically to get lost, and to intoxicate himself in dizzying syntaxes, seeking odd intersections of meaning, strange corridors of history, unexpected echoes, unknown humors, or voids of knowledge… but this quest is risky, full of bottomless fictions and endless architectures and counter-architectures… at the end, if there is an end, are perhaps only meaningless reverberations.” --Robert Smithson
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Ars Memoriae: The Theatre (1619) - Robert Fludd
“In the illusory babels of language, an artist might advance specifically to get lost, and to intoxicate himself in dizzying syntaxes, seeking odd intersections of meaning, strange corridors of history, unexpected echoes, unknown humors, or voids of knowledge… but this quest is risky, full of bottomless fictions and endless architectures and counter-architectures… at the end, if there is an end, are perhaps only meaningless reverberations.” --Robert Smithson
The Bouba/kiki effect (1929)
This page Meaning is part of the linguistics series. Illustration: a close-up of a mouth in the film The Big Swallow (1901)
Enlarge
This page Meaning is part of the linguistics series.
Illustration: a close-up of a mouth in the film The Big Swallow (1901)

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Etymology

From Middle English mening, menyng, equivalent to mean +‎ -ing. Cognate with Scots mening (“intent, purpose, sense, meaning”), West Frisian miening (“opinion, mind”), Dutch mening (“view, opinion, judgement”), German Meinung (“opinion, view, mind, idea”), Danish and Swedish mening (“meaning, sense, sentence, opinion”), Icelandic meining (“meaning”).

Citations

See also




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