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  2. Logogram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logogram

    For dictionaries, see lexicography. In a written language, a logogram (from Ancient Greek logos 'word', and gramma 'that which is drawn or written'), also logograph or lexigraph, is a written character that represents a semantic component of a language, such as a word or morpheme.

  3. Ideogram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ideogram

    Ideogram. An ideogram or ideograph (from Greek idéa 'idea' + gráphō 'to write') is a symbol that represents an idea or 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 their signifieds.

  4. List of writing systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_writing_systems

    In logographic writing systems, glyphs represent words or morphemes (meaningful components of words, as in mean-ing-ful) rather than phonetic elements. No logographic script is composed solely of logograms. All contain graphemes that represent phonetic (sound-based) elements as well.

  5. Writing system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Writing_system

    A logogram is a character that represents a morpheme within a language. Chinese characters represent the only major logographic writing systems still in use: they have historically been used to write the varieties of Chinese, as well as Japanese, Korean, Vietnamese, and other languages of the Sinosphere. As each character represents a single ...

  6. Logo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logo

    A logo (abbreviation of logotype; [1] from Ancient Greek λόγος (lógos) 'word, speech' and τύπος (túpos) 'mark, imprint') is a graphic mark, emblem, or symbol used to aid and promote public identification and recognition. It may be of an abstract or figurative design or to include the text of the name that it represents as in a wordmark.

  7. Ampersand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ampersand

    Ampersand: the sign &; the name being a corruption of 'and per se = and'; i.e. ' & by itself = and'. The sign derives from the scribes' ligature for the Latin: et; in certain italic versions, the letters e and t are clearly distinguishable.

  8. Chinese character classification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_character...

    A straightforward structural classification scheme may consist of three pure classes of semantographs, phonographs and signs —having only semantic, phonetic, and form components respectively, as well as classes corresponding to each combination of component types. [11] Of the 3500 characters that are frequently used in Standard Chinese, pure ...

  9. Anatolian hieroglyphs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anatolian_hieroglyphs

    Anatolian hieroglyphs first came to Western attention in the nineteenth century, when European explorers such as Johann Ludwig Burckhardt and Richard Francis Burton described pictographic inscriptions on walls in the city of Hama, Syria. The same characters were recorded in Boğazköy, and presumed by A. H. Sayce to be Hittite in origin.