0 past simple and past participle of signify
2 to make something known; to show:
3 to have importance or to matter:
Don't worry about being late - it doesn't signify.
Reviews 583 signified several large-scale blocs of cultures and heritages that were differentiated by their position along the spectrum of barbarity and modernity.
It also signified an important community effort among electronic music professionals.
Winning electoral fights signified the occupation of a more distinguished public place (the main square of the constituency) than one's opponents.
For some local magistrates, and almost all clerks and runners, lawsuits signified a source of extra income.
As obstructive undergrowth, the jungle represented an impediment to progress; as an environment for hostile predators it signified the dread characteristics of man's unenlightened state.
In terms of linguistic theory, one may say that the signifier is not sufficiently "demotivated"; in other words it resembles the signified too closely.
For the mean scores, a high score signified being utilized.
Forms of content are similarly constituted by the configuration of light which emanates from the signified (things).