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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Semiological

Semiography \Se`mi*og"ra*phy\, Semiology \Se`mi*ol"o*gy\, Semiological \Se`mi*o*log"ic*al\ Same as Semeiography, Semeiology, Semeiological.

Wiktionary
semiological

a. Of or pertaining to semiology.

Usage examples of "semiological".

Whether it deals with alphabetical or pictorial writing, myth wants to see in them only a sum of signs, a global sign, the final term of a first semiological chain.

This cannot fail to recall the signified in another semiological system, Freudianism.

We find here again a certain formal analogy with a complex semiological system such as that of the various types of psycho-analysis.

Let us quickly sketch the semiological schema: the example being a sentence, the first system is purely linguistic.

In fact, what allows the reader to consume myth innocently is that he does not see it as a semiological system but as an inductive one.

Every revolt of this kind has been a murder of Literature as signification: all have postulated the reduction of literary discourse to a simple semiological system, or even, in the case of poetry, to a pre-semiological system.

All that is needed is to use it as the departure point for a third semiological chain, to take its signification as the first term of a second myth.

Flaubert intervenes: to this first mythical system, which already is a second semiological system, he superimposes a third chain, in which the first link is the signification, or final term, of the first myth.

The development of publicity, of a national press, of radio, of illustrated news not to speak of the survival of a myriad rites of communication which rule social appearances makes the development of a semiological science more urgent than ever.

I defined it then, is not a form, it does not belong to the province of a semiological analysis of Literature.

Milena would then be made restless with semiological error, desperate with Bad Grammar.

Timbuk 3, it is commonly accepted that, within the ideological and semiological constraints imposed by our cultural communities, the way we choose to look says something about who we want to be.

I will continue the very deliberate manner of my semiological analysis until we have arrived at a preliminary reading of the passages in question.