semionomatopoeic
Semionomatopoeic is a term used in semiotics and linguistics to describe signs whose form imitates or evokes auditory events through onomatopoeia. The word combines semiosis, the process by which signs convey meaning, with onomatopoeia, the creation of words that resemble sounds. In this sense, semionomatopoeic signs rely on iconic relations between sound form and the sound they denote, rather than on arbitrary associations.
Etymology and concept. The first element, semio-, derives from semiosis and sign theory, while onomatopoeic refers
Theoretical framing. In semiotic analysis, these signs are valued for their non-arbitrary, or partly iconic, linkage
Examples. English words such as buzz, hiss, clang, and meow are widely cited as onomatopoeic. Cross-linguistically,
See also. Onomatopoeia, semiotics, ideophone, sound symbolism, sign, iconicity.