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<p>(the principle of <a href="page.php?w=semiotic_arbitrariness">semiotic arbitrariness</a>), motivated only by <a href="page.php?w=social_convention">social convention</a>. Saussure's theory has been particularly influential in the study of linguistic signs. The other major <a href="page.php?w=Semiotic_elements_and_classes_of_signs">semiotic theory</a>, developed by <a href="page.php?w=Charles_Sanders_Peirce">Charles Sanders Peirce</a> (1839-1914), defines the sign as a triadic relation as "something which stands to somebody for something in some</p><p>
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