See opsign in All languages combined, or Wiktionary
{
"etymology_templates": [
{
"args": {
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"2": "el",
"3": "ὄψις"
},
"expansion": "Greek ὄψις (ópsis)",
"name": "der"
}
],
"etymology_text": "Blend of Greek ὄψις (ópsis) + sign",
"forms": [
{
"form": "opsigns",
"tags": [
"plural"
]
}
],
"head_templates": [
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"expansion": "opsign (plural opsigns)",
"name": "en-noun"
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"lang_code": "en",
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"name": "English entries with incorrect language header",
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"coordinate_terms": [
{
"word": "hyalosign"
},
{
"word": "sonsign"
},
{
"word": "chronosign"
},
{
"word": "lectosign"
},
{
"word": "noosign"
},
{
"word": "tactisign"
}
],
"examples": [
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],
"ref": "2009 July, Irini Stamatopoulos, “Time as visualized by the cinematic medium”, in offscreen, volume 13, number 7:",
"text": "Opsigns and sonsigns are direct presentation of time.",
"type": "quotation"
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"ref": "2015 November 10, Marcello Garibbo, “Deleuze’s Philosophy of Cinema: Reflections on Subjectivity, Images, and Visual Artworks”, in THE DARK PRECURSOR International Conference on Deleuze and Artistic Research: DARE 2015 / Orpheus Institute / Ghent / Belgium / 9-11 November 2015:",
"text": "By presenting purely optical and sound situations in which no action is involved, opsigns and sonsigns place time at the centre of the cinematic image.",
"type": "quotation"
},
{
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170
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"ref": "2025 February 9, Wikipedia contributors, “Cinema 2: The Time-Image”, in English Wikipedia, Wikimedia Foundation:",
"text": "Thus, instead of what Deleuze had described as perception-images, affection-images, action-images, and mental images (all types of movement-image), there are now “opsigns” and “sonsigns” which resist movement-image differentiation.",
"type": "quotation"
}
],
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"Particularly in Gilles Deleuze's cinematic philosophy, a pure optical image that exists independently of any immediate action or narrative progression. Deleuze introduced this concept to describe moments in cinema where the visual element stands alone, detached from the traditional cause-and-effect structure of storytelling."
],
"id": "en-opsign-en-noun-mdC0-y3P",
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"(film theory) Particularly in Gilles Deleuze's cinematic philosophy, a pure optical image that exists independently of any immediate action or narrative progression. Deleuze introduced this concept to describe moments in cinema where the visual element stands alone, detached from the traditional cause-and-effect structure of storytelling."
]
}
],
"sounds": [
{
"ipa": "/ˈɒpˌsaɪn/"
}
],
"word": "opsign"
}
{
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"etymology_text": "Blend of Greek ὄψις (ópsis) + sign",
"forms": [
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"tags": [
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"coordinate_terms": [
{
"word": "hyalosign"
},
{
"word": "sonsign"
},
{
"word": "chronosign"
},
{
"word": "lectosign"
},
{
"word": "noosign"
},
{
"word": "tactisign"
}
],
"examples": [
{
"bold_text_offsets": [
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0,
7
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],
"ref": "2009 July, Irini Stamatopoulos, “Time as visualized by the cinematic medium”, in offscreen, volume 13, number 7:",
"text": "Opsigns and sonsigns are direct presentation of time.",
"type": "quotation"
},
{
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82,
89
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],
"ref": "2015 November 10, Marcello Garibbo, “Deleuze’s Philosophy of Cinema: Reflections on Subjectivity, Images, and Visual Artworks”, in THE DARK PRECURSOR International Conference on Deleuze and Artistic Research: DARE 2015 / Orpheus Institute / Ghent / Belgium / 9-11 November 2015:",
"text": "By presenting purely optical and sound situations in which no action is involved, opsigns and sonsigns place time at the centre of the cinematic image.",
"type": "quotation"
},
{
"bold_text_offsets": [
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163,
170
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],
"ref": "2025 February 9, Wikipedia contributors, “Cinema 2: The Time-Image”, in English Wikipedia, Wikimedia Foundation:",
"text": "Thus, instead of what Deleuze had described as perception-images, affection-images, action-images, and mental images (all types of movement-image), there are now “opsigns” and “sonsigns” which resist movement-image differentiation.",
"type": "quotation"
}
],
"glosses": [
"Particularly in Gilles Deleuze's cinematic philosophy, a pure optical image that exists independently of any immediate action or narrative progression. Deleuze introduced this concept to describe moments in cinema where the visual element stands alone, detached from the traditional cause-and-effect structure of storytelling."
],
"qualifier": "film theory",
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"(film theory) Particularly in Gilles Deleuze's cinematic philosophy, a pure optical image that exists independently of any immediate action or narrative progression. Deleuze introduced this concept to describe moments in cinema where the visual element stands alone, detached from the traditional cause-and-effect structure of storytelling."
]
}
],
"sounds": [
{
"ipa": "/ˈɒpˌsaɪn/"
}
],
"word": "opsign"
}
Download raw JSONL data for opsign meaning in English (2.7kB)
This page is a part of the kaikki.org machine-readable English dictionary. This dictionary is based on structured data extracted on 2026-01-16 from the enwiktionary dump dated 2026-01-01 using wiktextract (d1270d2 and 9905b1f). The data shown on this site has been post-processed and various details (e.g., extra categories) removed, some information disambiguated, and additional data merged from other sources. See the raw data download page for the unprocessed wiktextract data.
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