antisemantic
Definitions
adj
Based on form or structure rather than meaning.
As Albert says to Pogo during the poetry contest: "I made it up. I made it rhyme. Now I gotta make it mean something?" While Albert is almost self-consciously taking a Dadaist artistic position during this interchange, it is also true that his antisemantic tendencies are constantly with him.
To point up Antal's anti-meaning attitude I could still continue recalling quotations: a single one must yet be added here, and this from his work where he tried to outline the distinction between word-declension and word-formation, describing the Hungarian case-system in a strictly antisemantic manner.
Devoid of meaning.
Clearly, if the conjunction of realism and antisemantic-realism had the consequence that truth is an accident, that would be a serious problem.
The antisemantic arguments tap into deeply held intuitions that computers are just not the sorts of things one can correctly view as cognitive agents, as persons.
Hostile to meaning and clear communication; tending to conceal or undermine sense.
The event is repressed at the level of direct expression and can only make itself felt again in what Abraham and Torok call the “antisemantic” features of language.
In this chapter, I consider Donald Trump as an 'antisemantic' president and link antisemanticism to broader forms of populism.
Misconstruction of antisemitic.
After the pastor's death, however, the complainant reported that antisemantic publications were again being sold.
In 2006, the Department of Homeland Security gaveout small amounts of grant money to synagogues and Jewish schools after they received threats from Muslims. A number of mosques, whose anti-semantic and anti-capitalist agenda generates fearful and defensive reactions, then began to help themselves to some of the available grant money.