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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
signification
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ But elements of a more ambivalent, productive, associative approach to signification also exist within feminist psychology.
▪ Discourses are not just constituted by what is and is not written; other signification systems are involved.
▪ In its usage of the real or referent as signifier, surrealism eminently illustrated de-differentiated signification.
▪ The signification of dozen is something he can manipulate, on his fingers and toes if necessary.
▪ This broader approach to signification is particularly important in areas like psychoanalysis and applied psychology, which depend heavily on practices.
▪ This would restrict a general term, applicable to many objects, to one of its significations.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Signification

Signification \Sig`ni*fi*ca"tion\, n. [F. signification, L. significatio.]

  1. The act of signifying; a making known by signs or other means.

    A signification of being pleased.
    --Landor.

    All speaking or signification of one's mind implies an act or addres of one man to another.
    --South.

  2. That which is signified or made known; that meaning which a sign, character, or token is intended to convey; as, the signification of words.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
signification

early 14c., "symbolization, representation," from Old French significacion and directly from Latin significationem (nominative significatio) "a signifying, indication, expression, sign, token, meaning, emphasis," noun of action from past participle stem of significare "make known, indicate" (see signify). From late 14c. as "meaning" (of a word, etc.).

Wiktionary
signification

n. 1 The act of signifying, or something that is signified; significance. 2 evidence for the existence of something. 3 A meaning of a word.

WordNet
signification

n. the message that is intended or expressed or signified; "what is the meaning of this sentence"; "the significance of a red traffic light"; "the signification of Chinese characters"; "the import of his announcement was ambigtuous" [syn: meaning, significance, import]

Usage examples of "signification".

There is no less than a score of mystic allegorizing sects3 who reduce almost every thing in the Koran to symbol, or spiritual signification, and some of whom as the Sufis are the most rapt and imaginative of all the enthusiastic devotees in the world.

Lateral resemblances with other languages - similar sounds applied to analogous significations - were noted and listed only in order to confirm the vertical relation of each to these deeply buried, silted over, almost mute values.

This would restrict a general term, applicable to many objects, to one of its significations.

To keep a spatial metaphor, the approximative character of which I have already stressed, I shall say that the signification of the myth is constituted by a sort of constantly moving turnstile which presents alternately the meaning of the signifier and its form, a language-object and a metalanguage, a purely signifying and a purely imagining consciousness.

There is another manner of using the active participle, which gives it a passive signification: as, The grammar is now printing, grammatica jam nunc chartis imprimitur.

Even if they admit that the unhappy condition within us is due to the pravity inherent in body, they will urge that still the blame lies not in the Matter itself but with the Form present in it--such Form as heat, cold, bitterness, saltness and all other conditions perceptible to sense, or again such states as being full or void--not in the concrete signification but in the presence or absence of just such forms.

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.

From their very nature sensible things have a certain aptitude for the signifying of spiritual effects: but this aptitude is fixed by the Divine institution to some special signification.

Justin, they subordinated to their moralism and to which they did not give a specifically Christological signification.

Habermas to Derrida maintain that transcendental signifieds anchor signification in ways that prevent interpretive reality from being merely constructed, since they are significantly anchored in extralinguistic factors.

If I keep here to a synchronic sketch of contemporary myths, it is for an objective reason: our society is the privileged field of mythical significations.

Here, again, on account of the various significations of these means, so likewise it will be found that neither of them will be identical in its signification in all cases if the objects are different.

Wherefore in the sacraments, words and things, like form and matter, combine in the formation of one thing, in so far as the signification of things is completed by means of words, as above stated.