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We are familiar (0) with the saying “a picture paints a thousand words” and in the global village
the world has become, information in pictorial form is (1)_____we turn. Much communication takes place
through symbols rather than words, a case in point (2) ______ airports, where you can see the majority of
the thirty-four symbols devised (3) ______ the American Institute of Graphic Arts in the 1970s. Such signs
as a knife and fork for a restaurant or a telephone for a phone booth are a boon for (4) _______ a traveller
who does not speak English or use the Latin alphabet. (5) _______ worldwide "languages" of this kind are
musical and mathematical notation, circuit diagrams, road signs and computer icons, (6)______, again,
bypass the need for words. Even a label on a garment will carry, in symbols, washing and ironing
instructions. All these (7) ______ to be sufficient to their, (8)______ restricted worlds but would it really
be possible to devise a universal symbolic system of communication independent of any spoken language,
culture-free and value-free, as dreamt of by the seventeenth-century philosopher Leibniz? It would seem
(9) ______. Chinese and Japanese pictograms and ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics are sometimes cited as
examples of such a system, yet both Japanese script and Egyptian hieroglyphics include sound-based
elements and Chinese is often transliterated (10)______ romanised sound-based "pinyin" script. In a word,
words are inescapable
the world has become, information in pictorial form is (1)_____we turn. Much communication takes place
through symbols rather than words, a case in point (2) ______ airports, where you can see the majority of
the thirty-four symbols devised (3) ______ the American Institute of Graphic Arts in the 1970s. Such signs
as a knife and fork for a restaurant or a telephone for a phone booth are a boon for (4) _______ a traveller
who does not speak English or use the Latin alphabet. (5) _______ worldwide "languages" of this kind are
musical and mathematical notation, circuit diagrams, road signs and computer icons, (6)______, again,
bypass the need for words. Even a label on a garment will carry, in symbols, washing and ironing
instructions. All these (7) ______ to be sufficient to their, (8)______ restricted worlds but would it really
be possible to devise a universal symbolic system of communication independent of any spoken language,
culture-free and value-free, as dreamt of by the seventeenth-century philosopher Leibniz? It would seem
(9) ______. Chinese and Japanese pictograms and ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics are sometimes cited as
examples of such a system, yet both Japanese script and Egyptian hieroglyphics include sound-based
elements and Chinese is often transliterated (10)______ romanised sound-based "pinyin" script. In a word,
words are inescapable