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  • The differences between signifier signified and reference sense
    The two distinctions: signifier signified sense reference (sense meaning as in the original sinn bedeutung) are not only not the same, they are not even particularly related (other than both dealing with meaning) Although, I can see how the confusion could arise signifier signified distinguishes between two aspects of a sign - the thing that is used to refer to something and the thing (or
  • meaning - About the arbitrariness of a sign - Linguistics Stack Exchange
    This is all de Saussure who posited that a linguistic sign consists of a signifier (the sound or visual form of a word) and a signified (the concept or meaning it represents)
  • What is meaning according to Saussure? - Linguistics Stack Exchange
    In other words, meaning is a mental construct which refers to the signifier (for example, a physical object) Together (and, to Saussure, inseparably), the signifier and the signified constitute a sign
  • How does the brain map utterances to the same word concept?
    A word like bed occurs in a context: We wouldn't say: Did you go to bad early last night? Also, we don't say words in isolation, usually Unless, say, reading a list And when we mishear, we ask people to repeat Apart from that, I cannot answer the question I think useful terms here are signified (image of the thing) versus signifier (the word as heard, in your example)
  • Why is it called the ‘sound-image’ in Saussurean structural linguistics?
    The term “sound-image” seems to suggest a mental image that the signifier evokes, but then the explanations from all sources seem to say that it doesn’t involve image, only words and sounds Why is
  • semantics - Saussure says meaning is defined negatively, but is it . . .
    The signifier (the words red light) remains the same but the signified changes One is a traffic light, one is outside a studio and the other is a decoration on a tree What changes is the signified and therefore the meaning changes due to that And you know which one you are dealing with by a context
  • Sapir-Whorf vs. Chomsky - Linguistics Stack Exchange
    Can somebody let me know if this is a reasonable explanation for how the two theories are similar and different? This is not for homework, I'm just try to understand the difference, and my textbook
  • linguistic typology - What are some interesting features that are . . .
    This is on purpose not a very concrete question, I simply want to know some interesting properties other languages have that English doesn't, or features you even think English ought to have, this
  • What is the difference between case and adpositions?
    @LjL You are confusing two things: diachrony and synchrony form signifier and meaning signified To IO is a grammaticalisation from to PREP Grammaticalisation can occur in different ways as in Japan
  • Semantic logic of the word both in English - different from and?
    Here’s what I gleaned from the relevant page in “Language Typology and Syntactic Description” (Timothy Shopen, ed ) (Volume II, Complex Constructions) The semantic difference between normal coordination with “and” and emphatic coordination with “both…and” is that, in the latter, the separateness of the referents of the two coordinands is emphasized So, for example, “Both





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