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Created by: federica.masante
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Italian (IT)
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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)
Thai (TH)
Portuguese, Brazilian (PB)
Danish (DA)
Polish (PL)
Japanese (JA)
Chinese, Simplified (ZS)
Chinese, Traditional (ZT)
This influential structuralist and functionalist group of linguists/semioticians was established in 1926 in Prague by Czech and Russian linguists, although the term 'Prague school' was not used until ...
A dyadic model of the sign is based on a division of the sign into two necessary constituent elements. Saussure's model of the sign is a dyadic model (note that Saussure insisted that such a division ...
At the (lower) structural level of second articulation, a semiotic code is divisible into minimal functional units which lack meaning in themselves (e.g. phonemes in speech or graphemes in writing). ...
Morris divided semiotics into three branches: syntactics, semantics and pragmatics. Semantics refers to the study of the meaning of signs (the relationship of signs to what they stand for). The ...
Saussure's term sémiologie dates from a manuscript of 1894. 'Semiology' is sometimes used to refer to the study of signs by those within the Saussurean tradition (e.g. Barthes, Lévi-Strauss, Kristeva ...
This term was used by Peirce to refer to the process of 'meaning-making'.
The Russian cultural semiotician Yuri Lotman coined this term to refer to 'the whole semiotic space of the culture in question' - it can be thought of as a semiotic ecology in which different ...