Home

Wordless

Wordless is an adjective describing communication or expression that occurs without words, whether spoken, written, or signed. In practice, wordless works rely on images, sounds, gestures, or other nonverbal elements to convey meaning. The term is used across fields such as film, literature, comics, music, and art, as well as in cognitive and linguistic studies of nonverbal communication.

In media and art, wordlessness often marks works that tell a story or express mood without dialogue

In literature and graphic storytelling, several celebrated works are recognized for their minimal or absent text.

In music and visual art, wordless compositions or performances rely on instrumental sound, gesture, or visual

See also: silent film, wordless novel, picture book, graphic novel.

or
captions.
Silent
cinema
and
many
modern
visual
narratives
are
described
as
wordless
or
near-wordless
when
they
minimize
or
omit
spoken
language.
Wordless
novels,
a
specific
20th‑century
practice,
tell
complex
stories
entirely
through
sequential
images.
Notable
early
practitioners
include
Frans
Masereel
and
Lynd
Ward,
who
used
woodcut
and
engraving
techniques
to
create
narratives
without
text.
The
Snowman
by
Raymond
Briggs
is
a
prominent
example
of
a
wordless
picture
book.
Shaun
Tan’s
The
Arrival
is
another
well-known,
largely
text-free
graphic
work
that
communicates
through
detailed
illustrations
and
visual
symbolism.
arrangement
to
evoke
meaning
without
words.
The
concept
also
informs
discussions
of
accessibility
and
universal
design,
where
imagery
and
nonverbal
cues
are
used
to
convey
information
across
language
barriers.