Anideogramorideograph(fromGreekidéa'idea' +gráphō'to write') is asymbolthat represents anideaor concept independent of any particular language. Some ideograms are more arbitrary than others: some are only meaningful assuming preexisting familiarity with some convention; others more directly resemble theirsignifieds.Ideograms that represent physical objects by visually resembling them are calledpictograms.
- Numeralsandmathematical symbolsare ideograms, for example ⟨1⟩ 'one', ⟨2⟩ 'two', ⟨+⟩ 'plus', and ⟨=⟩ 'equals'.
- Theampersand⟨&⟩ is used in many languages to represent the wordand,originally a stylizedligatureof theLatinwordet.
- Other typographical examples include ⟨§⟩ 'section', ⟨€⟩ 'euro', ⟨£⟩ 'pound sterling', and ⟨©⟩ 'copyright'.
Ideograms are not to be equated withlogograms,which represent specificmorphemesin a language. In a broad sense, ideograms may form part of a writing system otherwise based on other principles, like the examples above in thephoneticEnglish writing system—while also potentially representing the same idea across several languages, as they do not correspond to a specific spoken word. There may not always be a single way to read a given ideograph. While remaining logograms assigned to morphemes, specificChinese characterslike ⟨Trung⟩ 'middle' may be classified as ideographs in a narrower sense, given their origin and visual structure.
Terminology
Pictograms and indicatives
Pictogramsare ideograms that represent an idea through a direct graphical resemblance to what is being referenced. Inproto-writingsystems, pictograms generally comprised most of the available symbols. Their use could also be extended via therebusprinciple: for example, the pictorialDongba symbolswithoutGebaannotation cannot represent theNaxi language,but are used as amnemonicfor the recitation of oral literature. Some systems also useindicatives,which denote abstract concepts. Sometimes, the wordideogramis used to refer exclusively to indicatives, contrasting them with pictograms.[1]
The wordideogramhas historically often been used to describeEgyptian hieroglyphs,Sumerian cuneiform,andChinese characters.However, these symbols represent semantic elements of a language, and not the underlying ideas directly—their use generally requires knowledge of a specific spoken language. Modern scholars refer to these symbols instead aslogograms,and generally avoid calling themideograms.Most logograms include some representation of the pronunciation of the corresponding word in the language, often using the rebus principle. Later systems used selected symbols to represent the sounds of the language, such as the adaptation of the logogram forʾālep'ox' as the letteralephrepresenting the initialglottal stop.However, some logograms still meaningfully depict the meaning of the morpheme they represent visually. Pictograms are shaped like the object that the word refers to, such as an icon of a bull denoting the Semitic wordʾālep'ox'. Other logograms may visually represent meaning via more abstract techniques.
ManyEgyptian hieroglyphsandcuneiform graphscould be used either logographically or phonetically. For example, the Sumeriandingir⟨𒀭⟩could represent the worddiĝir'deity', the godAnor the wordan'sky'.[2]In Akkadian, the graph⟨⟩could represent the stemil-'deity', the wordšamu'sky', or the syllablean.
While Chinese characters generally function as logograms, three of the six classes in thetraditional classificationare ideographic (orsemantographic) in origin, as they have no phonetic component:
- Pictograms (Tượng hìnhxiàngxíng) are generally among the oldest characters, with forms dating to the 12th century BC. Generally, with the evolution of the script, the forms of pictographs became less directly representational, to the extent that their referents are no longer plausible to intuit. Examples include⟨Điền⟩'field', and⟨Tâm⟩'heart'.
- Indicatives (Chỉ sự tựzhǐshìzì) like⟨Thượng⟩'up' and⟨Hạ⟩'down', or numerals like⟨Tam⟩'three'.
- Ideographic compounds (Hội ý tựhuìyìzì) have a meaning synthesized from several other characters, such as⟨Minh⟩'bright', a compound of⟨Nhật⟩'Sun' and⟨Nguyệt⟩'Moon', or⟨Hưu⟩'rest', composed of⟨Nhân⟩'person' and⟨Mộc⟩'tree'. As the understanding ofOld Chinese phonologydeveloped during the second half of the 20th century, many researchers became convinced that the etymology of most characters originally thought to be ideographic compounds actually included some phonetic component.[3]
Example of ideograms are theDOT pictograms,a collection of 50 symbols developed during the 1970s by theAmerican Institute of Graphic Artsat the request of theUnited States Department of Transportation.[4]Initially used to mark airports, the system gradually became more widespread.
Pure signs
Many ideograms only represent ideas by convention. For example, a red octagon only carries the meaning of 'stop' due to the public association andreificationof that meaning over time. In the field ofsemiotics,these are a type of puresign,a term which also includes symbols using non-graphical media. Modern analysis of Chinese characters reveals that pure signs are as old as the system itself, with prominent examples including the numerals representing numbers larger than four, including⟨Ngũ⟩'five', and⟨Bát⟩'eight'. These do not indicate anything about the quantities they represent visually or phonetically, only conventionally.
Types
Mathematical notation
A mathematical symbol is a type of ideogram.[5]
History
As truewriting systemsemerged from systems of pure ideograms, later societies with phonetic writing were often compelled by the intuitive connection between pictures, diagrams andlogograms—though ultimately ignorant of the latter's necessary phonetic dimension. Greek speakers began regularly visiting Egypt during the 7th century BC.[6]Ancient Greekwriters generally mistook the Egyptian writing system to be purely ideographic. According to tradition, the Greeks had acquired the ability to write, among other things, from the Egyptians throughPythagoras(c. 570– c. 495 BC), who had been directly taught their silent form of "symbolic teaching".[7]Beginning withPlato(428–347 BC), the conception of hieroglyphs as ideograms was rooted in a broadermetaphysicalconception of most language as an imperfect and obfuscatory image of reality. Theviews of Platoinvolved anontologicallyseparateworld of forms,but those of his studentAristotle(384–322 BC) instead saw the forms as parts identical within the soul of every person.[8]For both, ideography was a more perfect representation of the forms possessed by the Egyptians. The Aristotelian framework would be the foundation for the conception of language in the Mediterranean world into the medieval era.[9]
According to the classical theory, because ideographs directly reflected the forms, they were the only "true language",[10]and had the unique ability to communicate arcane wisdom to readers.[11]The ability to read Egyptian hieroglyphs had been lost during late antiquity, in the context of the country's Hellenization and Christianization. However, the traditional notion that the latter trends compelled the abandonment of hieroglyphic writing has been rejected by recent scholarship.[12][13]
Europe only became fully acquainted withwritten Chinesenear the end of the 16th century, and initially related the system to their existing framework of ideography as partially informed by Egyptian hieroglyphs.[14]Ultimately,Jean-François Champollion's successfuldecipherment of hieroglyphsin 1823 stemmed from an understanding that they did represent spokenEgyptian language,as opposed to being purely ideographic. Champollion's insight in part stemmed from his familiarity with the work of French sinologistJean-Pierre Abel-Rémusatregardingfanqie,which demonstrated that Chinese characters were often used to write sounds, and not just ideas.[15]
Proposed universal languages
Inspired by these conceptions of ideography, several attempts have been made to design a universal written language—i.e., an ideography whose interpretations are accessible to all people with no regard to the languages they speak. An early proposal was made in 1668 byJohn WilkinsinAn Essay Towards a Real Character, and a Philosophical Language.More recently,Blissymbolswas devised byCharles K. Blissin 1949, and currently includes over 2,000 graphs.[16]
See also
- Epigraphy– the study of inscriptions
- List of symbols
- List of writing systems
- Character (symbol)
- Emoji
- Heterogram (linguistics)
- Lexigrams
- Logotype
- Traffic sign
References
Citations
- ^Ramsey, S. Robert (1987).The Languages of China.Princeton University Press. p. 266.ISBN978-0-691-01468-5.
- ^Michalowski, Piotr (2008). "Sumerian". In Woodard, Roger D. (ed.).The Ancient Languages of Mesopotamia, Egypt and Aksum.Cambridge University Press. pp. 6–46.ISBN978-0-521-68497-2.p. 12.
- ^Boltz, William (1994).The origin and early development of the Chinese writing system.American Oriental Society. pp. 67–72, 149.ISBN978-0-940490-78-9.
- ^"Resources".American Institute of Graphic Arts.Retrieved2024-03-07.
- ^Rotman, Brian (2000).Mathematics as Sign: Writing, Imagining, Counting.Stanford University Press.ISBN978-0-804-73684-8.
- ^Westerfeld 2019,p. 23.
- ^O'Neill 2016,pp. 43–45.
- ^O'Neill 2016,pp. 32–34.
- ^Westerfeld 2019,p. 18;O'Neill 2016,pp. 18–20.
- ^O'Neill 2016,pp. 38–40.
- ^O'Neill 2016,pp. 18–20, 32–34, 46–50.
- ^Westerfeld 2019,p. 32.
- ^Houston, Stephen; Baines, John; Cooper, Jerrold (2003). "Last Writing: Script Obsolescence in Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Mesoamerica".Comparative Studies in Society and History.45(3). Cambridge University Press: 441–444.ISSN0010-4175.JSTOR3879458.
- ^O'Neill 2016,p. 1.
- ^O'Neill 2016,pp. 5–6.
- ^Unger 2003,pp. 13–16.
Works cited
- Coulmas, Florian (2003).Writing Systems: An Introduction to Their Linguistic Analysis.Cambridge University Press.ISBN978-0-521-78217-3.
- DeFrancis, John(1986).The Chinese Language: Fact and Fantasy.Honolulu: University of Hawaiʻi Press.ISBN978-0-8248-1068-9.
- Hannas, William C. (1997).Asia's Orthographic Dilemma.Honolulu: University of Hawaiʻi Press.ISBN978-0-8248-1892-0.
- Unger, James Marshall(2003).Ideogram: Chinese Characters and the Myth of Disembodied Meaning.Honolulu: University of Hawaiʻi Press.ISBN978-0-8248-2656-7.
- O'Neill, Timothy Michael (2016).Ideography and Chinese Language Theory: A History.De Gruyter.ISBN978-3-11-045923-4.
- Westerfeld, Jennifer Taylor (2019).Egyptian Hieroglyphs in the Late Antique Imagination.Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.ISBN978-0-8122-5157-9.
Further reading
- DeFrancis, John(1984). "The Ideographic Myth".The Chinese Language: Fact and Fantasy.University of Hawaiʻi Press.Retrieved2024-02-29– via pinyin.info.