The interpretant is the meaning produced by a sign in a given context — the functional effect the sign has on the receiving system: what it enables the interpreter to do, infer, feel, or further communicate.
The key feature of the interpretant, in Peirce’s account, is that it is itself a sign. The interpretant produced by one sign becomes a sign for the same object, capable of producing a further interpretant. This is the basis of semiosis: the ongoing, self-propagating process by which meaning is generated through chains of sign → interpretant → sign → interpretant. There is no final interpretant that closes the chain — meaning is open and processual, not fixed (Peirce, 1931–1958).
Types of interpretant
Peirce distinguished multiple levels (Short, 2007):
- Immediate interpretant: the meaning a sign is designed or conventionally intended to produce — the interpretation the sign invites
- Dynamical interpretant: the actual effect the sign produces in a specific interpreter in a specific context — the interpretation it actually causes
- Final interpretant: the interpretant that would be reached if semiosis could be completed — an ideal limit rather than an actual state
This distinction matters for understanding how misunderstanding works: the dynamical interpretant can diverge from the immediate interpretant, and the gap between intended and actual meaning is where communication fails, adapts, or invents.
Related terms
- sign — what produces an interpretant
- representamen — the sign vehicle that triggers interpretation
- semiosis — the process of sign-interpretant chains
Source: Peirce, Charles Sanders. Collected Papers. Harvard University Press, 1931–1958. See also Short, T. L. Peirce’s Theory of Signs. Cambridge University Press, 2007.