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ideographic

American  
[id-ee-uh-graf-ik, ahy-dee-uh-] / ˌɪd i əˈgræf ɪk, ˌaɪ di ə- /

adjective

  1. relating to or consisting of ideographs.


Other Word Forms

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

My analysis suggests that these khipus may be logosyllabic, meaning that they record their messages through a combination of phonetic and ideographic symbols.

From Scientific American • Nov. 11, 2017

Between the 5th and 8th centuries, Japan imported from China its ideographic writing, its Buddhist religion, its form of government organization and codes of law.

From Time Magazine Archive

I took it for the totem of his wife, MOÓ, macaw; and so it proved to be when later I was able to interpret their ideographic writings.

From Vestiges of the Mayas or, Facts Tending to Prove that Communications and Intimate Relations Must Have Existed, in very Remote Times, Between the Inhabitants of Mayab and Those of Asia and Africa by Le Plongeon, Augustus

The element An is the same that we have in Anu and is the ideographic form for “high” and “heaven.”

From The Fundamental Principles of Old and New World Civilizations by Nuttall, Zelia

Adel Church, near Leeds, is peculiar in having co-mingled with its eastern designs more than ordinarily tangible references to ancient Keltic worship, but nearly all Norman ideographic detail concerns itself with old-world myths.

From The Grotesque in Church Art by Wildridge, T. Tindall

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