Everything about Ideograms totally explained
An
ideogram or
ideograph (from
Greek ἰδέα idea "idea" + γράφω grafo "to write") is a
graphic symbol that represents an
idea, rather than a group of letters arranged according to the
phonemes of a spoken language, as is done in
alphabetic languages, or a strictly representational picture of a subject as may be done in
illustration or
photography.
Examples of ideograms include
wayfinding signs, such as in
airports and other environments where many people may not be familiar with the language of the place they're in, as well as
Arabic numerals and
mathematical notation, which are used worldwide regardless of how they're pronounced in different languages.
The term "ideogram" is commonly used to describe
logographic writing systems such as Egyptian
hieroglyphs and
Chinese characters. However,
graphemes in logographic systems generally represent
words or
morphemes rather than pure ideas.
Chinese characters
Chinese characters are conventionally called ideographs or ideograms, but as each character represents a
morpheme (and is useful almost always as an entire
word) rather than an idea, they're more accurately called
logograms. Within the Chinese linguistic tradition, characters are divided into six categories, of which "ideograph" is a plausible translation of one. Note that this doesn't imply that characters in that category represent ideas; they still represent morphemes. The categories are: pictograms, ideograms, compound indicatives, phono-semantic compounds, borrowed characters, and derived characters. The first four are ways characters are composed, while the last two refer to additional methods in which they're used.
- Pictograms are characters derived from pictures of the objects they originally denoted: for example, the character used to write the word meaning "moon", 月, is derived from a stylised picture of a crescent moon.
- Ideograms are unlike pictograms in that they don't picture things, but "indicate" their use — for example the character for "below" 下 has a stroke below the T of a perpendicular diagram while "above" 上 has an upside down T with the stroke above the perpendicular base.
- Compound indicatives are typically composed of pictograms or ideograms arranged to remind one of a more abstract word — for example, the character 明, for the word meaning "bright" seems to be composed of pictograms for sun and moon side by side (instead of sun, this is a historically simplified version of a pictogram for window, thus the compound more sensibly reminds one of the subjectively intense brightness of a spot of moonlight in a room). Though many people believe that all Chinese characters are of this type, they actually are relatively few.
- phono-semantic compounds are characters which typically are a combination of one or more units, functioning just as in the compound indicatives above, plus a single phonetic unit, a preexisting character which can suggest our word to us because of its very closely similar pronunciation, at least when our character was divised. Often, but not necessarily, one of the semantic pictograms is a classifier (called a 'radical': some common ones are "hand" and "water") useful in standard indexing schemes.
- Borrowed characters are characters used to represent morphemes unrelated to their original morphemes, based solely on having similar pronunciation.
- Derived characters are characters that have the same etymological root but have diverged, sometimes due to the morpheme itself diverging. The character 國 is a derived character, because the character 或 originally meant state, but this was forgotten due to its being borrowed for the conjunctive, "or".
The phono-semantic compounding process seems to have been the easiest and most flexible way to create characters. By dictionary count, the great bulk of characters (some estimate as many as 90 percent) use the phono-semantic principle.
Japanese and Korean
Hanja (Korean Chinese characters) and kanji (Japanese Chinese characters) were directly derived from Chinese characters. Hanja and kanji were (and are) used by older generations, and continue to be learned in schools today.
In
Japan, the use of
Kanji is widespread and shows no sign of diminishing. Japanese children are taught just over 1,000 characters in primary and secondary school and a few hundred more in high school. Therefore, a Japanese of average education can comfortably read and write most
Kanji used in everyday life.
To many people, Korean (hangul) and Japanese (hiragana, katakana) may look like ideograms because they look like "block letters", but that's a misconception. Hangul, hiragana, and katakana were created to make writing and reading easier for the common people, so they're phonetic and not ideographic. Each writing system has an alphabet that pertains to its sound.
Middle Iranian languages
Ideograms are one of the two essential characteristics of the
Pahlavi writing system. This system was used for writing several different
Middle Iranian languages, including (but not limited to)
Parthian (from which 'Pahlavi' gets its name) and
Middle Persian (for which the Pahlavi writing system is best attested).
The ideograms in these various Middle Iranian languages are all originally
Aramaic language words, Aramaic having previously (under the
Achaemenids) been the
lingua franca of trade and government. In the later Middle Iranian however, texts were written as spoken, that is, with Iranian language syntactical structure, rather than with Semitic language syntax. The Aramaic
words however remained: they were eventually no longer considered alien language words, but "symbols" representing a particular idea.
Thus the word for "king" wouldn't be written phonetically (as far as any
consonantary could be described to be phonetic), but as the "symbol" (RtL
MLK,
malka) representing and spoken as
shah. The use of ideograms - later called
huzvarishn "archaisms" - wasn't restricted to texts of commerce or government, or of words relating to those.
Middle Iranian languages were not exclusively written with ideograms. One variant that didn't use ideograms is
Pazand.
Ideograms in English and other Western Languages
Although the concept of using ideograms for everyday writing may at first seem alien to people who are accustomed to the roman alphabet, there are a few ideograms that are, in fact used quite often. For example, the symbol "1" is an ideogram that represents the concept of "one unit".
Simply affirming that this symbol represents the word "one" doesn't completely describe it, since, for example, "1st" is read "first" and not "onest", and in languages that have the concept of genders, "1" may be read in the masculine or the feminine depending on the word that follows it. In Spanish, "1 silla" is read "una silla" but "1 libro" is read "un libro". Therefore, it becomes clear that the symbol "1" isn't the word "one" but, instead, the "concept of one", which is read differently according to the context, much in the same way as
hanzi.
Modern ideograms
Young people (Y-generation) is using more and more
emoticons in instant messaging to represent concepts and sometimes phonemes.
Terminological objections
There is a common misconception that Chinese characters exist separately from spoken language, representing pure ideas which can be determined from their shape. This has led to many attempts to abandon the name "ideogram" in favour of a term that more accurately represents their
morphemic (and often
phonetic) nature: that is, that they represent words and syllables, not ideas. One alternative is
logogram, from the Greek roots logos ("word") and grapho ("to write"). Others include
Sinogram, emphasising the Chinese origin of the characters, and Han character, a literal translation of the native term. These terms have gained some currency among scholars, but have failed to spread into common usage. The native terms (Chinese
hanzi, Japanese
kanji) are also fairly widespread in the contexts of the individual languages, but they're not generally considered suitable for discussion of the script as a whole.
True ideographic systems:
Blissymbols
Formal languages such as mathematical notation, logic, UML, computer languages
Hobo signs - American hoboes
Sioux and Ojibwa pictographsFurther Information
Get more info on 'Ideograms'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://ideogram.totallyexplained.com">Ideogram Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |