See also: <span class="searchmatch">barthes</span> and <span class="searchmatch">Barthes</span> French Wikipedia has an article on: <span class="searchmatch">Barthès</span> Wikipedia fr <span class="searchmatch">Barthes</span> Borrowed from Occitan. Historically most prevalent in Tarn...
See also: <span class="searchmatch">barthes</span> and <span class="searchmatch">Barthès</span> English Wikipedia has an article on: <span class="searchmatch">Barthes</span> (disambiguation) Wikipedia Borrowed from French <span class="searchmatch">Barthes</span>/<span class="searchmatch">Barthès</span>, itself from...
barthésien or <span class="searchmatch">Barthes</span> + -ian. Barthesian (comparative more Barthesian, superlative most Barthesian) Of or relating to Roland <span class="searchmatch">Barthes</span> (1915–1980), French...
Roland <span class="searchmatch">Barthes</span> Wikipedia From French <span class="searchmatch">Barthes</span>. IPA(key): [ba̠ɾɯ̟to̞] バルト • (Baruto) A transliteration of the French surname <span class="searchmatch">Barthes</span> Roland <span class="searchmatch">Barthes</span>, French...
linguistic self-referentiality - in discourse 1975, Roland <span class="searchmatch">Barthes</span>, Roland <span class="searchmatch">Barthes</span> by Roland <span class="searchmatch">Barthes</span>: Every discourse is caught up in the interplay of degrees...
Digital Detroit: Rhetoric and Space in the Age of the Network, page 160: <span class="searchmatch">Barthes</span> describes the punctum (the nonconnotative or denotative meaning) of the...
title of a 1967 essay by the French literary critic and theorist Roland <span class="searchmatch">Barthes</span> (1915–1980). death of the author (uncountable) A technique of literary...
modelled on workshop but de-emphasizing the idea of work, inspired by Roland <span class="searchmatch">Barthes</span>' essay From Work to Text. Coined by Gregory Ulmer. See Textshop for Psychoanalysis...
Lexie lexia From the French lexie, originating in the writings of Roland <span class="searchmatch">Barthes</span>. Further from Ancient Greek λέξῐς (léxĭs, “a saying, a word”). lexie (plural...
Digital Detroit: Rhetoric and Space in the Age of the Network, page 160: <span class="searchmatch">Barthes</span> describes the punctum (the nonconnotative or denotative meaning) of the...