symbolic
Sociology
(adjective)
Referring to something with an implicit meaning.
Management
(adjective)
Something with an implicit meaning.
Examples of symbolic in the following topics:
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Lead-Sheet and Figured-Bass Symbols
- The most common lead-sheet chord symbols for triads, seventh chords, and standard alterations orembellishments of those chords, along with corresponding thoroughbass figures.
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Chord Symbols
- In such cases, a chord symbol above the staff tells the performer what chord should be used as accompaniment to the music until the next symbol appears.
- A chord symbol above the staff is sometimes the only indication of which notes should be used in the accompaniment.
- Chord symbols also may be used even when an accompaniment is written out, so that performers can read either the chord symbol or the notated music, as they prefer.
- There is unfortunately a wide variation in the use of chord symbols.
- In particular, notice that some symbols, such as the "minus" sign and the triangle, can refer to different chords, depending on the assumptions of the person who wrote the symbol.
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Religious Symbols
- The Star of David is a Jewish religious symbol that represents Judaism.
- Religious symbolism is the use by a religion of symbols including archetypes, acts, artwork, events, or natural phenomena.
- Religions view religious texts, rituals and works of art as symbols of compelling ideas or ideals.
- The symbolism of the early Church was characterized as being understood by initiates only.
- Religious symbolism is effective when it appeals to both the intellect and the emotions.
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The Symbolic Nature of Culture
- Although language is perhaps the most obvious system of symbols we use to communicate, many things we do carry symbolic meaning.
- Other gang members use these symbolic sartorial signals to recognize enemies and allies.
- According to Max Weber, symbols are important aspects of culture: people use symbols to express their spirituality and the spiritual side of real events, and ideal interests are derived from symbols.
- Cultures are shared systems of symbols and meanings.
- Alphabets are one example of a symbolic element of culture.
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Symbolism
- Symbolism was a late 19th century art movement of French, Russian, and Belgian origin.
- Symbolism was a late 19th century art movement of French, Russian, and Belgian origin that manifested in poetry and other arts.
- The term "symbolism" is derived from the word "symbol" which derives from the Latin symbolum, a symbol of faith, and symbolus, a sign of recognition.
- Thus, they wrote and painted in a very metaphorical and suggestive manner, endowing particular images or objects with symbolic meaning.
- In Belgium, symbolism became so popular that it came to be thought of as a national style: the static strangeness of painters like René Magritte can be considered as a direct continuation of symbolism.
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Symbols and Nature
- Language is a symbolic system of communication based on a complex system of rules relating spoken, signed, or written symbols.
- A sign is a symbol that stands for something else.
- Signs can consist of sounds, gestures, letters, or symbols, depending on whether the language is spoken, signed, or written.
- Language is based on complex rules relating spoken, signed, or written symbols to their meanings.
- Parrots mimic the sounds of human language, but have they really learned the symbolic system?
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The Symbolic Interactionist Perspective
- Symbolic interactionists view the family as a site of social reproduction where meanings are negotiated and maintained by family members.
- Symbolic interactionism is a social theory that focuses on the analysis of patterns of communication, interpretation, and adjustment between individuals in relation to the meanings of symbols.
- This emphasis on symbols, negotiated meaning, and the construction of society as an aspect of symbolic interactionism focuses attention on the roles that people play in society.
- Symbolic interactionists also explore the changing meanings attached to family.
- Symbolic interactionists explore the changing meanings attached to family.
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Basic Map Types
- As do dot maps, graduated symbol maps use symbols that occur at points across a map.
- However, in a graduated symbol map, symbol size varies based on quantity or magnitude.
- Higher values get larger symbols.
- Range-graded symbol maps have a predetermined number of symbol sizes, each of which represents a RANGE of values.
- In a proportional symbol map, on the other hand, each symbol's size is equivalent to the quantity it represents.
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Defining Boundaries
- One important factor in how symbolic boundaries function is how widely they are accepted as valid.
- Symbolic boundaries are a "necessary but insufficient" condition for social change.
- He saw the symbolic boundary between the sacred and the profane as the most profound of all social facts, and the one from which lesser symbolic boundaries were derived.
- Rituals, whether secular or religious, were for Durkheim the means by which groups maintained their symbolic and moral boundaries.
- Mary Douglas has subsequently emphasized the role of symbolic boundaries in organizing experience, private and public, even in a secular society.
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Symbolic Interactionism
- The basic notion of symbolic interactionism is that human action and interaction are understandable only through the exchange of meaningful communication or symbols.
- According to symbolic interactionism, the objective world has no reality for humans, only subjectively-defined objects have meaning.
- It should also be noted that symbolic interactionists advocate a particular methodology.
- Thus, symbolic interaction tends to take two distinct, but related methodological paths.
- Symbolic Interaction arose through the integration of Structural Functionalism and Conflict Theories.