Iconography [noun]

Definition of Iconography:

symbolic representation

Synonyms of Iconography:


Opposite/Antonyms of Iconography:

-


Sentence/Example of Iconography:

The green movement’s effort to take down past iconography and poke holes in the legacy of towering figures like Muir is important, but it’s only symbolic until power, money, and representation are diversified.

This probably puts some amount of pressure on other teams using native names and iconography — most notably the Chicago Blackhawks.

“As customers enter the store, they are greeted with clean, colorful iconography and a store directory that encourages them to download and use the Walmart app while they shop,” said Walmart’s chief customer officer Janey Whiteside.

The history of engraving is a part of iconography, and various histories of the art exist in different languages.

The mystery plays gave to the iconography of the late XV century its realistic character.

The best artists go astray when they fail to obtain their ideas of Christian iconography from a qualified ecclesiastic.

For the whole of this period the royal iconography is much more scanty than for the two Theban empires.

For the scheme itself we must refer the reader to the second volume of Didron's Christian Iconography, p. 193.

This sketch of the iconography of the dance does not pretend to be a history of the subject, except in the most elementary way.

He has not fared well in Chinese iconography which represents him as an enormously fat smiling monk.