Advanced Grammar
The Thing Pictured
A visual language is based on tangible, visible things. We use
tools like a knife and fork to indicate eating, a hammer to indicate work,
scales to indicate law. It would seem obvious to start by declaring that every
glyph standing by itself is a thing and should be read as a noun.
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
helm |
scissors |
boat |
eye |
love |
thought |
bad odor |
death |
drink |
To use the glyph as a verb, we would have to add grammatical glyphs specific
to a verb.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
I steer |
I cut |
I sail |
you see |
you love |
she thinks |
you stink |
he dies |
to drink |
To a large extent, it's purely idiomatic as to how each verb relates to its
corresponding noun. It's a matter of first impression. He did something
that looks like a sailboat; he sailed. He did something scissor-related;
he cut.
We might, however, be able to apply some loose rules. Verbs associated with
tangible nouns -- objects that can be touched, handled and manipulated
-- can often be understood as using the object -- I use scissors; I use a
sailboat. On the other hand, verbs associated with intangible nouns
are almost the opposite. You don't really use death or love. If
anything, they use you; however, it's probably more accurate to
say that they affect you. Thus, he is beset by death; he is beset
by thought.
(It's not entirely unprecedented to have no clear distinction between nouns
and verbs other than usage. In English, there are a ton of words that double as
both nouns and verbs -- attack, call, doubt, escape, fear, fill, light,
love, praise, promise, push, smell, work and taste to name a few,
plus the more controversial and trendy impact and
access -- as opposed to non-nounverbs, such as open, sit or recline,
where the noun and verbs describing the action take different forms. Also,
nounverbs would not include words like plant, set, ship or fly,
where there is a noun that sounds the same, but it's something entirely
different, and not the action described by the verb.)
Of course, not every picture of a thing indicates the actual thing pictured,
so we'll need some way to differentiate the metaphor from the actual object.
I've been using the perpendicular symbol in this context to mean straight,
square, that is, real.
 |
idea |
|
light bulb |
 |
attachment |
|
paper clip |
 |
luck |
|
horseshoe |
 |
cold |
|
penguin |
 |
welcome |
|
pineapple |
 |
science |
|
microscope |
 |
cool |
|
sunglasses |
On the other hand, there will be times that the glyph will mean exactly what
it shows, and we'll need to add an indicator when it should be read as a
metaphor or a generic. I've been using double circles because (1) it can be
seen as wheels, and metaphor is from the Greek for vehicle, and
(2) it's the infinity symbol and infinitus is Latin for not limited.
 |
plow |
|
agriculture |
 |
telescope |
|
astronomy |
 |
spinning wheel |
|
textile |
I suppose a logical language would have a rule declaring that any picture of
a thing indicates the actual thing (scales = scales, not scales = justice), and
then we would add a little marker that makes it metaphorical if necessary;
however, my primary rule in this language is that logic always takes a back seat
to prior usage. When you see scales on a corporate web site, your first thought
is "lawyers", not "they weigh things".

Table of Contents
Last updated October 2004
Copyright © 2004 Matthew White