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.

  • 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.

Peirce, C. S. (1931–1958). Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce (C. Hartshorne & P. Weiss, Eds.). Harvard University Press.
Short, T. L. (2007). Peirce’s Theory of Signs. Cambridge University Press.