de saussure
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
- Proper noun:
- Ferdinand de Saussure: A Swiss linguist and scholar in the field of historical linguistics. He is widely regarded as the founder of modern structural linguistics. His posthumously published work, based on lecture notes, established the fundamental principles of semiotics and synchronic linguistics, which studies language as a system at a specific point in time.
Usage Examples
- Proper noun:
- The theories of de Saussure revolutionized the study of language in the 20th century.
- In his "Course in General Linguistics," de Saussure introduced key concepts like the signifier and the signified.
Advanced Usage
- "Saussurean" (adj): Pertaining to or characteristic of the theories of Ferdinand de Saussure.
- The analysis followed a Saussurean structuralist approach.
Variants and Related Words
- Structuralism: A theoretical paradigm in linguistics and other humanities, heavily influenced by de Saussure's ideas, that analyzes elements of human culture in terms of their relationship to an overarching system or structure.
- Semiotics/Semiology: The study of signs and symbols, a field for which de Saussure laid a foundational framework, calling it "semiology."
- Synchronic linguistics: The study of a language at a single point in time, a methodological distinction emphasized by de Saussure as separate from diachronic (historical) linguistics.
Synonyms
- Ferdinand de Saussure
- The founder of structural linguistics
Related Terms and Concepts
- Langue and parole: A central Saussurean distinction where "langue" refers to the abstract, systematic rules and conventions of a language shared by a community, and "parole" refers to the individual, concrete instances of speech.
- Sign, signifier, signified: In Saussurean theory, a linguistic sign is the union of a "signifier" (the sound-image or written form) and a "signified" (the concept it represents).
- Arbitrariness of the sign: The principle that there is no natural or intrinsic connection between a signifier and its signified.
Noun
- Swiss linguist and expert in historical linguistics whose lectures laid the foundations for synchronic linguistics (1857-1913)