英:['lɒɡəɡrɑ:f]
美:['lɒɡəɡrɑf]
英:['lɒɡəɡrɑ:f]
美:['lɒɡəɡrɑf]
Noun
1. a single written symbol that represents an entire word or phrase without indicating its pronunciation;
"7 is a logogram that is pronounced `seven' in English and `nanatsu' in Japanese"
"用于给语音提供图形表示的工具,文字书写器",1879年,来自 logo- "word" + -graph "记录工具; 书写的东西"。最早的用法(1797年)是指"字谜",并经常用于代替该词(见 logogriph)。在古希腊语中, logographos 是"散文作家,编年史作者,演讲稿作者"。相关: Logographic。
The first known use of logograph was circa 1888
1 With a collaborator, Rozin devised an experimental curriculum that moved children through degrees of linguistic abstraction by teaching them Chinese logographs followed by a Japanese syllabary, and only then applying the same logic to English.
2 They used a form of writing that was phonetic, based on sounds rather than logographs like Egyptian hieroglyphs.
3 Then from poetry he would turn to romances, fables, stories, epigrams, madrigals, logographs, acrostics, charades, enigmas, and impromptus; and he even wrote a comic opera.