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The nature of Sign and sign/symbol distinction

The nature of Sign and sign/symbol distinction. Lecture # 10. Review of lecture # 9 . Langue/ parole distinction & competence versus performance Ferdinand De Saussure made a distinction between the two concepts Langue- social, a set of conventions shared by all the speakers of a language

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The nature of Sign and sign/symbol distinction

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  1. The nature of Sign and sign/symbol distinction Lecture # 10

  2. Review of lecture # 9 Langue/ parole distinction & competence versus performance Ferdinand De Saussure made a distinction between the two concepts Langue- social, a set of conventions shared by all the speakers of a language Parole- belongs to individuals, actual sounds and sentences produced by speakers/ writers

  3. Review of lecture # 9 Language system- Langue Language behaviour – Parole Noam Chomsky made a similar distinction Competence versus behaviour Knowledge of the structure of language- competence The way a speaker uses knowledge- performance

  4. Linguistic sign and symbol distinction Language is made up of signs Saussure says, sign is the central fact of language Sign- A physical marker which carries some information The information is direct, brief and precise (only this, no other)

  5. Sign and symbol distinction(contd..) Sign is opposed to symbol which is a mere indication Sign contains more information & stands in place of something as a means of pointing towards it indirectly Example: Gesture of waving hand – sign, but can be interpreted variously as symbolic of farewell, dismissal etc.

  6. Sign & symbol distinction (contd..) The way of eating, dressing up is a sign which signals some social practice or belief When you apply the concept to behaviour, society and culture, it becomes evident that our whole culture is made up of signs which have special significance or meaning in our culture

  7. Sign & symbol distinction (contd..) Saussure’s idea of sign has led to the growth of a whole area of the study of operation of signs in culture and society- Semiotics In language studies, it helps to understand what language is Linguistic sign has two parts – Signifier & Signified or the word which signifies and the object that is signified

  8. Sign & Symbol distinction (contd..) Tree signifies But the word tree does not signify the actual object. In that case the word for this object in all languages would have been the same – tree So, the word tree does not represent the actual object in life.

  9. Sign & symbol distinction (contd..) The word ‘tree’ represents the concept or the image in our minds. We invent a word with some sound images which is later used to represent the concept of it in our minds. No logical reason for choosing a certain combination of words to represent the concept

  10. Signs and symbol distinction (contd..) Relationship between sounds (and words) & the concept they signify is an arbitrary one Modified diagram as under: Tree signifies Concept of tree (word or sound (mental image = Image = signifier) signified)

  11. Sign & symbol distinction (contd..) That which signifies (the word) is signifier. That which is signified (the concept) is the signified. Sign is the composite of both – it consists of the relationship between the signifier and the signified. This relationship continues over a long period of time

  12. Sign & Symbol distinction (contd..) The relationship is established as a social fact by a society. It is arbitrary, not a logical relationship. It is not established by reason (there is no reasonable connection between the object and the sounds used to represent it) Only social agreement can give it validity

  13. Sign & Symbol distinction (contd..) There is no intrinsic basis to it – linguistic sign is arbitrary Many such signs make up the system of language Signs are relational entities, they exist only in terms of relation to each other. They enter into complex relationship with each other.

  14. Sign & Symbol distinction (contd..) The relationships make up the whole system of language. Since arbitrary, the signs differ from one language to another – concepts are different in different languages Same as concepts are different in different societies and cultures

  15. Sign & symbol distinction (contd..) Every society constructs its own concepts of real world and links these concepts to certain signifiers and signifieds arbitrarily chosen. The signifiers are then used to refer to these concepts and signifieds are used to refer to the actual objects

  16. Sign & symbol distinction (contd..) Once relationships are made, they are fixed. People not free to choose any arbitrary signifiers they want to choose A symbol is any kind of sign that signifies several concepts on the basis of primary relationship between signifier and signified.

  17. Sign & symbol distinction (contd..) The word ‘tree’ signifies concept of tree – that is primary relationship. It may also signify ‘life’, ‘growth’, etc. The word ‘book’ signifies the concept of a book, ‘face’ signifies concept of face Book Face

  18. Sign & Symbol distinction (contd..) The word ‘book’ may also mean ‘reserve’ and the word ‘face’ may also mean ‘to involve yourself with a person or situation Then the words ‘tree’, ‘book’ and ‘face’ are not only a signs, but also symbols. A symbol is built up of several associative relationships between the signifiers and the signifieds

  19. Summary (Sign & Symbol distinction) Language made of signs Linguistic sign has two parts – Signifier & Signified That which signifies (the word) – Signifier That which is signified (the concept) – Signified Sign – composite of both, it consists of the relationship between signifier & signified

  20. Summary That is why we say that language is a system of symbolic signs since there are often very complex associative relationships between the signifiers and the signifieds in a language Signifiers and signified operate in their relationship with each other

  21. Summary Saussure’s contributions Saussure exerted two kinds of influence on modern linguistics: First, he provided a general orientation, a sense of the task of linguistics which has seldom been questioned. Second, he influenced modern linguistics in the specific concepts.

  22. Summary Saussure’s contributions Many of the developments of modern linguistics can be described as his concept, i.e. his idea of the arbitrary nature of the sign, langue vs. parole, synchrony vs. diachrony, syntagmatic and paradigmatic relations, etc.

  23. Summary Saussure’s contributions Saussure’s contribution regarding the concepts of sign & symbol distinction brought a new revolution and enjoys a prime importance in the domain of modern linguistics

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