Signified and signifier  

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[[Charles Sanders Peirce]] analyzed sign systems and came up with the following: [[Charles Sanders Peirce]] analyzed sign systems and came up with the following:
-An Icon signifies by resemblance. An [[Indexicality|Indexical]] sign signifies by causal connection and finally, a Symbol signifies by learned convention.+An [[icon]] signifies by resemblance. An [[Indexicality|Indexical]] sign signifies by causal [[connection]] and finally, a [[symbol]] signifies by learned [[convention]].
==See also== ==See also==

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Ferdinand de Saussure theorizes that a sign has two parts: signifier and signified. The signifier is the form that the sign will take, whether it be a sound or image and the signified is the meaning that is conveyed.

Example

Signifier: the word 'tree' = Signified: the mental image of a tree.

Charles Sanders Peirce analyzed sign systems and came up with the following: An icon signifies by resemblance. An Indexical sign signifies by causal connection and finally, a symbol signifies by learned convention.

See also




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Signified and signifier" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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