Logograms Ideograms are not to be equated with
logograms, which represent specific
morphemes in a language. In a broad sense, ideograms may form part of a writing system otherwise based on other principles, like the examples above in the
phonetic English writing system—while also potentially representing the same idea across several languages, as they do not correspond to a specific spoken word. There may not always be a single way to read a given ideograph. While remaining logograms assigned to morphemes, specific
Chinese characters like ⟨⟩ 'middle' may be classified as ideographs in a narrower sense, given their origin and visual structure.
Pictograms and indicatives Pictograms, depending on the definition, are ideograms that represent an idea either through a direct
iconic resemblance to what is being referenced, or otherwise more broadly visually represent or illustrate it. , used by the
Nakhi people as a mnemonic in reciting oral literature The word
ideogram has historically often been used to describe
Egyptian hieroglyphs,
Sumerian cuneiform, and
Chinese characters. However, these symbols represent semantic elements of a language, and not the underlying ideas directly—their use generally requires knowledge of a specific spoken language. Modern scholars refer to these symbols instead as
logograms, and generally avoid calling them
ideograms. Most logograms include some representation of the pronunciation of the corresponding word in the language, often using the rebus principle. Later systems used selected symbols to represent the sounds of the language, such as the adaptation of the logogram for 'ox' as the letter
aleph representing the initial
glottal stop. However, some logograms still meaningfully depict the meaning of the morpheme they represent visually. Pictograms are shaped like the object that the word refers to, such as an icon of a bull denoting the Semitic word 'ox'. Other logograms may visually represent meaning via more abstract techniques. Many
Egyptian hieroglyphs and
cuneiform graphs could be used either logographically or phonetically. For example, the Sumerian
dingir could represent the word 'deity', the god
An or the word 'sky'. In Akkadian, the graph could represent the stem 'deity', the word 'sky', or the syllable . While Chinese characters generally function as logograms, three of the six classes in the
traditional classification are ideographic (or
semantographic) in origin, as they have no phonetic component: • Pictograms ( ) are generally among the oldest characters, with forms dating to the 12th century BC. Generally, with the evolution of the script, the forms of pictographs became less directly representational, to the extent that their referents are no longer plausible to intuit. Examples include 'field', and 'heart'. • Indicatives ( ) like 'up' and 'down', or numerals like 'three'. • Ideographic compounds ( ) have a meaning synthesized from several other characters, such as 'bright', a compound of 'Sun' and 'Moon', or 'rest', composed of 'person' and 'tree'. As the understanding of
Old Chinese phonology developed during the second half of the 20th century, many researchers became convinced that the etymology of most characters originally thought to be ideographic compounds actually included some phonetic component. Example of ideograms are the
DOT pictograms, a collection of 50 symbols developed during the 1970s by the
American Institute of Graphic Arts at the request of the
United States Department of Transportation. Initially used to mark airports, the system gradually became more widespread.
Pure signs Many ideograms only represent ideas by convention. For example, a red octagon only carries the meaning of 'stop' due to the public association and
reification of that meaning over time. In the field of
semiotics, these are a type of pure
sign, a term which also includes symbols using non-graphical media. Modern analysis of Chinese characters reveals that pure signs are as old as the system itself, with prominent examples including the numerals representing numbers larger than four, including 'five', and 'eight'. These do not indicate anything about the quantities they represent visually or phonetically, only conventionally. == Types ==