An ideograph is one word that creates or reinforces an ideology.
For example, you can't tell me what the word "liberty" means, but you know it and when you hear that word, you feel a certain way.
looking for the answer also , keep trying
3rd century A.D
Of or pertaining to an ideogram; representing ideas by symbols, independently of sounds; as, 9 represents not the word "nine," but the idea of the number itself.
Yes, the Aztecs had a writing system known as Nahuatl, which was a combination of ideographic and phonetic symbols. They used this system to record important events, historical accounts, and religious rituals on various materials such as parchment and illustrated codices.
Cuneiform is a method of writing on clay by using a reed stylus to make imprints that form ideographic characters (like modern Chinese). The system was adopted as a writing system in Mesopotamia because clay and reeds were abundant there.
The four stages of the development of writing in Sumer are: Pictographic stage – using pictures to represent objects or ideas. Ideographic stage – using symbols to represent concepts or abstract ideas. Phonetic stage – representing sounds or syllables with symbols. Syllabic stage – representing full syllables with symbols.
If an organized code or language were transmitted by the Spectrum or slow-scan visual graphic method, the word portion, stretching things would be in the form of an Ideographic language where one symbol stands for an IDEA and coud be the equivalent of a word or even a sentence or (Commence plan a). Ideographic lanuages of course exist- such as Japanese. Of necessity the slow-scan transmission would take this form and be quite practical. Some UFO codes have been (recovered) but none have been decoded officially. They tend to look lilke machine-made squiggles for oscillographic transmission.l the atom could not have been split without this instrument so it is worth looking into. The idea has been explored, of course, by science-Fiction writers.
I am not sure if you meant Unicode characters. If so, ] [ En space, ] [ Figure space, ] [ Ideographic space, and ] [ Em space inserts more spaces between chars. If you mean CSS settings, You can use {word-spacing:10px} to have more space between words and {letter-spacing:10px} to have more space between letters.
Chinese is the only widely used ideographic language, including three parts, pronunciation, font and meaning , only read the correct pronunciation, recognize the font, understand the meaning, then you can really grasp a character, meantime, if learning the Chinese characters, words and sentences together, it will help to understand Chinese characters deeply. There are many good Chinese learning apps that you can use, such as MagiChinese.
Chinese is not an alphabetical language, it is ideographic language. Each Chinese character represents an idea or a word, not a letter. This means there is no 'h' or any other letter, either. For the benefit of foreigners learning Chinese, an alphabetic system called 'Pinyin' was devised in the early 1950s to represent the sounds of Chinese words. The letter 'h' and most other letters used in English appear in this Pinyin system, but this is not the written Chinese language.
Well, all of the earliest civilizations used them. In fact the earliest writing systems found appear to have been created for the purposes of business accounting with only symbols for numbers initially (symbols to identify types of goods were then added later followed much later by more general either ideographic, alphabetic, or syllabic symbols). This suggests that humans were thinking in numbers long before these civilizations existed.
The Japanese writing system is based on Chinese writing, and is typologically an ideographic system with elements of a syllabic system. The art of Japanese writing is called calligraphy. To be precise, modern Japanese is written using three writing systems: 1. Kanji (Chinese characters) are ideographic and stand for whole words or morphemes on their own. 2. Hiragana (syllabic characters, or a syllabary similar to an alphabet) is used to spell out Kanji in pronounceable syllables, if needed, or to spell out the endings and inflections and particles used to build sentences. 3. Katakana (a second syllabary similar to hiragana) is used to spell out foreign words or in advertising; it's function is similar to italics in English. Japanese also has an official romanization called Romaji, which is a system for spelling Japanese using Roman (Latin) letters. Kana