signage

noun
/ˈsaɪnɪd͡ʒ/US

Etymology

From sign + -age.

  1. derived from signum
  2. derived from signare
  3. derived from en
  4. inherited from seġnian — “to mark; sign
  5. inherited from signen
  6. suffixed as signage — “sign + age

Definitions

  1. Signs, particularly those imparting commercial, directional, or road traffic information,…

    Signs, particularly those imparting commercial, directional, or road traffic information, taken collectively.

    • The signage at the airport is designed to point the way clearly to important locations.
    • Uniformity must be paramount in all signage and markings and is the only sound basis from which the job of traffic control can be started on any highway system.
    • Early involvement with a signage designer can often assist the architect and the owner to identify problems in directional or informational signage that may not have been considered.
  2. A sign, a signboard.

    • [T]he department is basically involved in providing basic amenities and the minimum requirements such as clearing trekking tracks, providing signages, basic accommodation or tents and so on.
    • External signages invite customers from different distances. Main signage makes appeal to customers approaching store from a distance of 170–180 feet, and the storefront signages makes impact from a distance of 60–70 feet.
    • From 'parking' to 'exit' or 'washrooms' to 'please pay here' – a signage is at every retail point.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for signage. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA