A metalanguage is a language used to speak about another language. The language spoken about is an object language, while the language that describes, explains, evaluates, etc. the object language is a metalanguage.
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Metalingual, Metalinguistic
Metalinguistic is a term often used by Roman Jakobson to identify one of the six communicative functions, namely the function in which communication is directed to a code or a series of codes. As not all communicative exchanges depend on linguistic codes, it may be...
Metanarrative
We call a metanarrative an event or narrative designed to illuminate or even explain another event; an arch over all events or discourse, providing a transparent and extreme perspective. Marxism is sometimes characterized as a theory that offers a metanarrative....
Metaphor
In one sense - a figure of speech in which the word or expression is transferred from its usual area to someone else; more generally, the name of each trope or figure of speech. There is a huge and still growing literature on metaphor. In this literature, there are...
Metatheory
Metatheory is a theory of formulating and judging theories - in short, a theory of theories.
Methodeutic
Methodeutic is a term used by Charles Peirce to denote the third branch of logic. For Persian logic is a normative science, divided into three branches: Speculative grammar Critique Speculative rhetoric (Methodeutic). The third branch delivers the theory of...
Metonymy
Metonymy is a trope or figure of speech in which the name of a thing is replaced by a name usually associated with the first. When it is said that today the White House announced its decision to reject the budget proposed by Congress, the name of the building was used...
Mirror Stage
Mirror stage is an early stage in the psychological development of human beings (a stage emphasized by Lacan), in which young children begin to recognize themselves in the mirror.
Modern
Modern in philosophy is a term that generally means post-medieval and pre-contemporary. It covers the period, roughly speaking, from 1500 to the late 19th or early 20th century. In literary studies modern refers to the twentieth century. Related: Enlightenment...
Modernity
Modernity is a constellation of assumptions, values and attitudes through which the modern period differs from previous epochs (for example from the Middle Ages) and, if such a time has indeed occurred, from the postmodern. Characterizing the period since it began in...
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Intersemiotic
Intersemiotic is what happens between two different sign systems. By comparison, intrasemiotics occur within the same sign system.
Signum ad placitum
Signum ad placitum is Latin for conventional signs. Related: Signum
Syntagmatic vs. Paradigmatic
For more information on the opposition syntagmatic vs. paradigmatic, please check associative, and axis. Related: Syntagm
Interpretation
The process of understanding and interpreting a message. Related: Interpretant Interpreter
Unconscious
Sigmund Freud (1856-1939) is easily one of the most influential people of the XX century. Although lots of his ideas have been denied in the years after his death, as being pseudo-scientific, Freud has surely shaped the way, we people think of ourselves. One of his...
Free Course in Semiology
A completely and truly free course on Semiology (Semiotics). Learn about the meaning of signs, how and why did the field emerged. What is the relationship between the street signs and the signs that we use every day - words.