It means the thing or concept denoted by a sign.
"Signified" refers to the concept or meaning represented by a sign or symbol. It is often used in semiotics to describe the underlying meaning conveyed by a signifier, such as a word or an image.
A signifier is a term used in semiotics to refer to a sound, word, or image that represents a concept or idea. It is the physical form of a sign that carries meaning in a language system, creating connections between the signifier and the signified.
"Childe" is an archaic term used in literature to refer to a young nobleman, typically a son of a noble family. It is often associated with romantic or heroic connotations, stemming from its use in medieval and Renaissance poetry.
In linguistics, a signifier is a sound, word, or symbol that conveys a specific meaning. It is the physical form of a sign that points to a particular concept or idea. For example, the word "dog" is a signifier that represents the concept of a four-legged animal.
The word "mean" can be a verb, a noun, or an adjective.
dog
The word tissue was not common in the 17th century but it usually signified cloth or a layer of thin cloth.
Signifier (eg red light) is the word or image acoustique that refers to the signified as content part or information (eg do not proceed past this point)
In linguistics, a signifier is a sound, word, or symbol that conveys a specific meaning. It is the physical form of a sign that points to a particular concept or idea. For example, the word "dog" is a signifier that represents the concept of a four-legged animal.
It means abad virbal & rude word signified to a person you hate or is your enemy
Signifier is the image....signified is the concept behind the image
what was the celebration called that signified the end of the war
derrida advocates a third element in signification-- there is the signified, the signifier and the interpretant. In other words, there is no meaning without the interpreter, who reads the signified in the signifier and decides what exactly is being communicated. Furthermore, Derrida, as a deconstructionist, privileges polysemy-- there are many signifieds within one signifier, and these cannot be separated without an inherent violence unto the text. Whereas Saussure finds the link between signified and signifier as arbitrary, Derrida finds it to be too complicated to map onto such a simplistic structure. For example, the Greek word Pharmakon may mean either poison or medicine. It is the interpreter's job (or rather the translator's job) to interpret the word poison or medicine, thereby translating both the Greek word Pharmakon to the English word, and the Greek word poison to the Greek word medicine. It is an interior translation that takes place within the word itself, pharmakon-poison to pharmakon-medicine. This is quite difficult to explain in less than an essay, so you should really read Derrida himself instead of looking for some online study guide.
This usually means that the way you have been writing is grammatically incorrect.
The opening of the Berlin Wall signified the closing of the Cold War.
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The quality or state of being significant., That which is signified; meaning; import; as, the significance of a nod, of a motion of the hand, or of a word or expression., Importance; moment; weight; consequence.
Signified