释义 |
semiotical, a.|siːmɪˈɒtɪkəl, sɛmɪ-| Also semei- |siːmaɪ-|. [Formed as prec. + -al1.] 1. = semiotic a. 1.
1588J. Harvey Disc. Probl. 79 Looke into the semeioticall or presignificative iudgements of phisitions. 1623Hart Arraignm. Ur. ii. iv. 59 He maketh moreover this semioticall part of Physicke, concerning the signes of diseases, to depend altogether upon conjecture. 1703Art's Improv. p. xxv, Thirdly, Semeiotical. Treating of the Crisis of Diseases. 1825Beddoes Let. 4 Dec. in Poems p. li, It still remains for some one to exhibit the sum of his experience in mental pathology and therapeutics, not in a cold, technical, dead description, but a living semiotical display. 2. = semiotic a. 3.
1938C. Morris in Internat. Encycl. Unified Sci. I. ii. 29 ‘Rules of sign usage’, like ‘sign’ itself, is a semiotical term and cannot be stated syntactically or semantically. 1946Mind LX. 146 As a semiotical psychiatrist, a Therapeutic Positivist has to hand a technique for the resolution of philosophical problems and disputes. Hence semiˈotically adv.
1916C. E. Long tr. Jung's Analytical Psychol. p. vii, The Vienna School interprets the psychological symbol semiotically, as a sign or token of certain primitive psychosexual processes. 1972W. C. Stokoe Semiotics & Human Sign Lang. i. 15 Semiotically considered the difference between fingerspelling and a sign language could hardly be greater. |