Company: Others
Created by: federica.masante
Number of Blossarys: 31
- English (EN)
- Romanian (RO)
- Russian (RU)
- Spanish, Latin American (XL)
- Macedonian (MK)
- Indonesian (ID)
- 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)
- Thai (TH)
- Portuguese, Brazilian (PB)
- Danish (DA)
- Polish (PL)
- Japanese (JA)
- Chinese, Simplified (ZS)
- Chinese, Traditional (ZT)
- Romanian (RO)
- Russian (RU)
- Spanish, Latin American (XL)
- Macedonian (MK)
- Indonesian (ID)
- 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)
- Thai (TH)
- Portuguese, Brazilian (PB)
- Danish (DA)
- Polish (PL)
- Japanese (JA)
- Chinese, Simplified (ZS)
- Chinese, Traditional (ZT)
Semiotic codes have either single articulation, double articulation or no articulation. Codes with single articulation have either first articulation or second articulation only. Codes with first ...
This was Baudrillard's term (borrowed from Plato); 'simulacra' are 'copies without originals' - the main form in which we encounter texts in postmodern culture.
A sign which does not contain any other signs, in contrast to a complex sign.
These are the meaning-making behaviours in which people engage (including the production and reading of texts) following particular conventions or rules of construction and interpretation.
For Saussure, this was one of the two parts of the sign (which was indivisible except for analytical purposes). In the Saussurean tradition, the signifier is the form which a sign takes. For ...
For Saussure, the signified was one of the two parts of the sign (which was indivisible except for analytical purposes). Saussure's signified is the mental concept represented by the signifier ...
In Saussurean semiotics, the term signification refers to the relationship between the signifier and the signified.