Multimodal
Multimodal
Multimodal
INTRODUCTION
Multimodality is a concept introduced and developed in the last two decades to account for
the different resources used in communication to express meaning. The term is used both to
describe the phenomenon of human communication and to identify a diversified and growing
field of research (Garcia 2016, Flores 2016 and Spotti 2016). As a concept of
modes, in texts and communicative events, such as still and motion pictures, speech, writing,
concerned with developing theories, analytical tools and descriptions that approach the study
As a phenomenon of communication, the term is used not only by multimodal analysts, but
also by works in disciplines concerned with texts and meaning, such as linguistics and
communication studies, all of which however tend to devote their analytical focus on
language. Within the field of “multimodal studies” (O’Halloran and Smith, 2011), the
(Jewitt 2009; O’Halloran 2011), all hinging on four key assumptions (Jewitt, 2014), namely
that, (a) all communication is multimodal; (b) analyses focused solely or primarily on
language cannot adequately account for meaning; (c) each mode has specific affordances
arising from its materiality and from its social histories which shape its resources to fulfil
given communicative needs; and (d) modes concur together, each with a specialized role, to
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meaning-making; hence relations among modes are key to understanding every instance of
communication.
All communication is, and has always been, multimodal (Kress and van Leeuwen 1996). Be
relies on more than one mode to make meaning. This might sound today like a commonplace;
yet historically, the dominant role attributed to verbal language, and the mode of writing
This has meant not only that societies have developed the resources of speech and writing at a
particularly high level of articulation, but also that research and education have focused their
prescriptions and conventions for the use of language. As a result, the investigation of other
modes has been restricted to specialised fields, such as musicology, the arts, etc.
The digital texts we engage with daily make meaning through the combined use of colour,
writing, sound, images, and layout, at least. It is not only the case of texts that we encounter
on the web, but also of “texts” that we interact with daily, to fulfil ordinary tasks in our
offline environments, such as the interfaces displayed on the screens of ATM machines or
those for purchasing a train ticket. This holds also for the texts that we produce; everyday
options. The multimodal character of digital texts is also redefining the use of the resources
of language (van Leeuwen, 2008). Writing itself is changing its functions, as lexis integrated
than read, as in the case of URLs used as hyperlinks (Adami, 2015). Writing is also an
increasingly developing resource for meaning-making, like those of font (Van Leeuwen,
2005; Van Leeuwen, 2006), which are generally disregarded in linguistic studies. While
speech is changing its functional load in the online homologue of face-to-face interaction,
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i.e., video-chats (for the phenomenon of “mode-switching” in video-chats, Sindoni 2013), the
mode of image is being used for new interactive functions, as in Facebook comments, for
example. Such a changed semiotic landscape contributes in essential ways to the visibility of
Advertising in Nigeria has grown from its earliest beginning of using the town criers to
announce availability of goods and services to become a big industry in Nigeria. Advertising
is now very important in the economy of the nation, considering the fact that it serves as a
source of information about goods and services and also persuades consumers to patronise
Advertising is the structured and composed non-personal communication, usually paid for
and usually persuasive in nature about products (goods, services and ideas) by identified
practices used to bring products, services, opinions, or causes to public notice for the purpose
of persuading the public to respond in a certain way toward what is advertised”. Also,
Osunbiyi (1999:8) posits that: “advertising is a controlled persuasive communication, paid for
by identified sponsor(s), about products, services or ideas and disseminated through the mass
media to a target group. Daramola (2003:191) opines that the objective of advertising is to
induce immediate action, to create liking and preference for a product or organisation, and to
create awareness about a product or service. Some advertisements also seek to build a
respected corporate identity for a company, product, and brand name or make all familiar to
the public.
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1.2 Statement of Research Problem
Various studies have been undertaken in the field of multimodal discourse analysis. Many
have attempted to study the meaning embedded in political advertisement, through media,
some of these studies have also centred on political speeches, congresses, texts, debates etc.
For instance, Taiwo (2007) examined the use of language in news tabloid, particularly in
headlines to reflect specific ideologies and power relations. Jegede (2015) examined the use
of processes in the editorials of Nigerian print media in order to achieve a meaningful and
However, there seems to be a lacuna in the multimodal analysis of the advertisement of some
brands and products like noodles, as there are not so many concrete research of multimodal
analysis conducted on them. This research conducts a thorough multimodal analysis on the
use of texts, images, colour, signs and symbols as multimodal tools in the analysis of the
This research aims to carry out a multimodal discourse analysis of Indomie Handbills and
i. Identify the dominant multimodal resources used in the billboard and handbills
advertisement of Indomie.
ii. Analyse the verbal and non-verbal meanings in the handbills and billboards.
iii. Discuss how the verbal and non-verbal resources convey meaning in the Nigerian
socio-cultural context.
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1.4 Research Questions
iii. How do the handbills and billboards portray and represent the identity of the brand ?
There has been a lot of multimodal discourse analysis done on advertisement but only few or
no work has been done on noodles handbills and billboard advertisement. This study draws
includes signs, symbols, colours and images present in the handbills and billboard.
As emphasised in the objectives of this study, it will be deduced that the research is restricted
to Indomie noodles handbills and billboard advertisement. This restriction is not due to the
fact that multimodal analysis does not occur in other noodles handbills and billboard but it is
necessary to choose these particular products so as to be able to carry out a critical research in
advertisement will help to fill the void left by scholars in the area of multimodal discourse
analysis. As it appears that scholars have not focused extensively on this area, this research
will serve as one of the forerunners in this area of study pending further research.
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1.8 Methodology
This section presents the procedures and methodology that would be employed in gathering
the data for the research work. It describes the nature of the research data, the method of data
collection and selection as well as the procedures for data analysis. It also explains the
theoretical framework adopted for this research. The research instruments for this study are
The data used for this research are handbills and billboard of different products of Indomie
respectively. Altogether, ten handbills and billboard advertisement were purposively selected
for this study due to the richness of multimodal resource found in them. The handbills and
billboards were those that prominently encode salient information about modes of
advertising.
The purposive sampling method was chosen because it enabled the selection of handbills and
billboards that most portray adequate information about advertising these products. Also the
selected product handbills and billboards are rich in multimodal resources that encode certain
communication usually paid for and usually persuasive in nature about products
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Billboard: Billboard according to Dominick (1998:406) cited in Olateju and Oyebode
(2014) is that medium of advertisement which remains the singular media form that
occupies our public space which members of the public cannot escape from.
1.10 Summary
In conclusion of this chapter, the background to the study has been carefully examined to
give adequate knowledge on what this research is about, statement of the research problem
also gives us an insight into what this research work would be based on. The aim and
objectives of this research as well as the research questions have been carefully stated. Also,
the significance and scope of the study have been clearly stated and justified. This chapter
most importantly includes the methodology which describes the nature of this research, the
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CHAPTER TWO
LITERATURE REVIEW
2.1 Introduction
In the contemporary world people compete, consciously or unconsciously, with each other
for diverse purposes including education, recruitment and even survival. Competition can
mechanism which facilitates the whole process. Moreover, one is unable to walk down a
street, shop, watch television, go through the mail, read a newspaper or take a train without
encountering any kind of advertisement (Cook 2013). This review of literature in this chapter
brings into focus the studies and research done on the subject of multimodality, the concepts
2.2 Discourse
Etymologically, the word ‘discourse’ dates back to the 14th century. It is taken from the Latin
word ‘discursus’ which means a ‘conversation’ McArthur, (1996). Though in all cases it
relates to language, and it describes it in some way, the term conveys a number of
sense, it incorporates both the spoken and written modes although, at times, it is confined to
speech being designated as ‘a serious conversation between people. This restriction is also
context is said to be discourse. Stubbs (1983:1) cited in Olateju et al. Fairlough (1992:28)
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also defined discourse. He defined discourse to be more than just language use: but language
firstly refers to it the topics or types of language used in definite contexts. Here, it is possible
to talk of political discourse, philosophical discourse and the like. He continues with the
second denotation that, the word 'discourse' is occasionally employed to stand for what is
spoken, while the word ‘text’ is employed to denote what is written. It is however important
to note that the text/discourse distinction highlighted here is not always sharply defined. As
observed by Nunan (1993), the scholar explains that these two terms are sometimes used
interchangeably and in many instances treated differently. Carter (ibid) adds that the
respectively. Carter’s third denotation is that, this word is used to establish a significant
contrast with the traditional notion of ‘sentence’, the ‘highest’ unit of language analysis:
discourse refers to any naturally occurring stretch of language. In this connection, Trask
(1999) clarifies that a discourse is not confined to one speaker or writer, but it can embrace
the oral or written exchanges produced by two or more people. It is this last sense of the term
However, despite that discourse is defined as a chunk that surpasses the sentence, not all
chunks of language can fall within the scope of this definition. In fact, what characterises
discourse is obviously not its supra-sentential nature as much as the entirety it has its
complete message Nunan, (1993). The nature of this whole cannot be perceived by
examining its constituent parts, ‘there are structured relationships among the parts that result
in something new’ Schiffrin, (2006, p.171). In the light of this, larger units such as
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paragraphs, conversations and interviews all seem to fall under the rubric of ‘discourse’ since
To embark on defining discourse analysis (henceforth DA), one would inevitably tackle two
divergent approaches to language in general and discourse in particular: the formal approach
and the functional approach. Schiffrin (1994) combines both approaches when designating
DA as ‘the study of language use above and beyond the sentence’ Schiffrin (1994: p.170).
The first trend in defining DA is a formal or structural trend. In this paradigm, DA is seen as
the exploration of language use by focusing on pieces larger than sentences. Schiffrin (ibid)
elucidates that discourse is merely a higher level in the hierarchy: morpheme, clause and
sentence (as stated originally by Zellig Harris in his first reference to DA); she also explains
that the pursuit of DA is to depict the internal structural relationships that tie the units of
The second trend is functional in perspective: it is not so much concerned with intra-
sentential relations as much as with language use. The analysis of discourse is, necessarily,
the analysis of language in use. As such, it cannot be restricted to the description of linguistic
forms independent of the purposes or functions which these forms are designed to serve in
The focus in this conception is on the regularities which utterances show when situated in
contexts. Thus, it is obvious that the aspects of the world in which an utterance is used can
also contribute to the meaningfulness of discourse. van Els et al. (1984), in this respect, argue
that ‘the study of language in context will offer a deeper insight into how meaning is attached
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2.2.2 Multimodal Discourse Analysis
It is widely recognized that communication in modern world does not depend only on the
verbal language; the non- verbal one also is needed. Communication requires the
combination of both linguistic and visual characteristics which is known as multimodal. This
last relies on semiotics resources for the projection of the meaning. (Ademilokun and Olateju.
2015).
Multimodal discourse analysis goes back to Halliday’s (1978, 1989) “Social semiotic
semiotic resources, (gesture, image and music) in order to transmit meaning with each other;
hence, language operates to describe the social situations that contribute in creating meanings
(Brain, 2012, p.170). Halliday, (2009) describes three types of social meanings that deal with
Multimodal texts imply these aspects to achieve visual meaning. Images carry these
three aspects ideational which represents the meaning of image, interpersonal which means
the engagement of the image with the viewer and textual meaning depends on how the
Kress and van Leeuwen (2001) argue that multimodal text is concerned with three
compositional meaning. The former is concerned with the description of texts, the latter is
pertained to the interaction of linguistic with other signifiers such as colour, gaze and dress.
The last perspective is depended on the explanation on the constituent elements of images
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and its function. But, Lemke (1998) named them representational and organizational
meanings. Ademilokun, (2014) asserts that “multimodal texts are becoming popular for
political discourse, protest discourse and discourse of civic engagement among many others,”
(p.2). The widespread of the use of multimodal resources depends on the public’s ‘awareness
handbills images with written text are combined namely that multimodal texts need to be
understood as the combination of different modes which serves the purposes of creating
In multimodal discourse analysis, the image contains different figures such as diagram,
photographs (person), and maps. Images also contain written text like slogan, emblems and
banners. This means that multimodal discourse analysis depends on the link between the
portray element and written text, specifically the combination between verbal and non- verbal
communication. The essence of multimodal discourse analysis is shown in the use of visual
elements (depicted element) with written language. It is important to note that visual analysis
is very significant to provide reader or viewer with sufficient detail of what is depicted or
Natharious (2004) demonstrates that in human history, the visual image has never been more
dominant that it is now (p.2). Namely the abundance of visuality in modern human
considered an effective tool for reinforcing elite or popular about causes or various issues.
For instance, politicians are portrayed in handbills, in order to provide their followers with
general details and information about their political ideologies, their plans and visions about
future. Additionally, the political power of visual images serves the political campaign in the
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sense that those images provide them with the supports and acceptance of the politicians by
voters (p.4).
In this respect, Barthes, (1977) uses the two concepts anchorage and relay in demonstrating
the syntagmatic relationship between verbal and non- verbal communication in discourse. He
asserted that anchorage is most frequent function of linguistic message and commonly found
in press photographs and advertisements (p.40, 41); this means that anchorage refers to the
linguistic message which directed the reader in understanding meanings. While the relay is
concerned with the connection between texts and image that reflect a complementary
relationship.
van Leeuwen, (2001) mentions that visual analysis is typically based on visual semiotic and
iconography which is associated with the art of representation of pictures and description of
images; Moreover, the iconographical process of visual analysis developed by art historians
such as Edgar Win, Erwin PanoFasky and Mayer Schapiro. These processes play a crucial
Carey, and Rumiko, (2001) claims that visual analysis introduces a clear method for
analysing the meaning and the element presented in images in relation to people and things.
In this way the meaning is described not only for representational sake, but also for
interactional side in order to catch the intention of the viewers to the image. This means that
the study of images and the description of its social context is not sufficient; so that the
semiotic practices is a significant process that influence the followers’ decisions because
images are produced to serve reality, documentary of place, thing and event. Their analysis
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According to some researchers, visuality plays vital role in political expressions in the sense
that visual images are used for the representation of politicians, political parties, their
attitudes to public; moreover, the visual images are more reliable to people then spoken or
Images extremely accomplish in order to send such goals or to advance particular ideologies.
Similarly, political images which construct to provide the audience by specific traits of
candidates’ messages. Kathleen, (1912, p.2) It is important to note that visual aesthetics
consider as essential part in rhetorical environment, and the condensation only on verbal
The rhetorical theory exceeds the area of the analysis of linguistics artefacts, in which
concern with uncovering ideologies and the hegemonic power that offer s in images.
Sonjak and Foss (1994) in their book “A rhetoric schema for the evaluation of visual
imagery” visual rhetoric’s used to mean both a visual object or artefact and perspective on
the study of visual data (p.304). It means that visual rhetoric’s use the visual symbols for sake
of communication.
It is worth to note that visual rhetoric characterizes by three concepts: the visual rhetorics a
symbolic action in which occurs between the image (what is portrayed) and the sign which is
connected. Then visual rhetoric contains also such constituent elements like colour, size and
form which employ to transfer such message to communicate. Finally, visual rhetoric is
communicative in which arranges particular elements and such action like smile, frown, etc
Goggin and Maurrondaly (2002) in her book “Rhetoric review”, articulates that visual
rhetoric divided into rhetoric of image and words and appears together in semiotics practice.
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She elucidated that the relationship between rhetoric of images and words is more fluid than
representations of candidate and their emblem are merged to appeal the electorate. Verbal or
rhetoric’s is tried to convince citizens with verbal symbols or words including an amount of
The analysis of rhetorical text is determined that communication can be visual, oral, written
or any other multimodal form. Audience, context and purpose are three concepts take into
account during the rhetorical analysis. Audience is the target citizen for the text, for instance
in the electoral handbills the electorate is the intended audience. Next, context is relevant to
the norms and values that underlie the text, because is aimed to reveal the perspective and
values that embody in the text. At the end, purpose of text in which pursuit to communicates
about particular ideas and concepts. For example, electoral handbills are represented to
appeal electorate to vote for particular party (Alfano and Brien, 2011).
The term ‘social semiotics’ was claimed to be introduced by Halliday (1978). Halliday
proposes that language cannot be separated from society. He views language as a ‘social
semiotic’ in which language, the means by which people interact, must be considered in a
social context. Language and society is a unified concept and need to be investigated as a
whole.
Halliday (1978: 14) points out those individual human beings become part of a group through
language. Halliday adds that a society does not consist of participants but of relations, and
these relations define a social role. The link between social roles and language is explained
by Halliday (1978: 15) as one in which social roles are combinable, and the individual, as a
member of a society, occupies not just one role but many at a time, always through the
medium of language. Language is again a necessary condition for this final element in the
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process of the development of the individual, from human being to person to what we may
call ‘personality’, a personality being interpreted as a role complex. Here the individual is
seen as the configuration of a number of roles defined by the social relationships in which he
Social semiotics has been developed as a theory of multimodal sign-making in the works of
Hodge and Kress (1988), van Leeuwen (2005a) and Kress (2010), who have extended
Halliday’s socially-framed view of language to all semiotic resources. Social semiotics draws
on Halliday’s assumption that language is a product of social processes and that the resources
of a language are shaped by the functions that it has developed to satisfy the needs of
people’s lives. Through their everyday acts of sign-making, while exchanging meanings,
speakers express social structure, affirm their social roles and transmit their systems of values
predefined rules, that speakers use creatively by making choices. Through choice, speakers
produce variation; variation expresses (affiliation and conflict with) social structures and
roles, along with systems of knowledge and values, i.e., power. Language in Halliday – and
all semiotic resources in Hodge and Kress (1988) – is a social process in two senses. In
expressing social values and structures, language reveals them and, at the same time, it
constructs them, thus establishing social relations and systems of knowledge and values every
time it is used. Through choice at all levels (orstrata), language expresses larger relations of
power existing within society and constructs power roles in the specific event.
2.4 Advertisement
The emergence of Advertising in Nigeria could be said to have started officially with Rev.
Henry Townsend's Newspaper called Iwe Iroyin in 1859 (Oduntan, 2005). This particular
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Bardi (2010) agrees with Bel-Molokwu (2009) on his claim that advertising is as old as man.
To further corroborate the above assertion, Ogbodoh (1990:10-11) posits thus: Advertising in
Nigeria is said to have begun naturally with one of the earliest forms of mass communication
town crying. This traditional African medium performed the universal communication
function of disseminating information about available goods, services, and ideas to the
people. He explains the use of the traditional African medium which was used to announce
inter-tribal wars, disasters, and important ceremonies including marriages, products and
Looking in depth on the concept of advertisement, its primary objective is to attract people to
raise people’s attention toward an advertised product. MacRury (2009) argued that we need
to understand the advertisement cautiously due to its provocative nature. It merely serves as a
method which has a limited range of such purposes as increasing and preserving the
consumer’s awareness, disseminating information, and commonly making a case for a certain
product, service, and brand. In the same vein, Dyer (2008) noted that advertisement simply
has a range of communicative purposes, such as to notify, convince, figure out similarities,
and retell the audience about a product. However, the majority of the commercial
Advertisement can be found indoor and outdoor. The indoor advertisements include TV,
radio, and website advertisement among others, while the outdoor advertisements are posters,
billboards, and handbills. However, the latter deserves more attention in the discourse study
as they have been commonly ignored by the previous researchers (e.g., Oyebode &
Unuabonah, 2013). Moreover, besides the Internet, an outdoor advertisement can serve as one
of the easily accessible media from which people can access the information because it can
be found almost in every neighbourhood. Ajayi (2005), Oyebode and Unuabonah (2013)
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mentioned that outdoor advertising offers a chance for people to look at, making it the most
added “outdoor advertising is a significant medium that deserves attention in its right,
especially the way its “audience” is constructed as a public through discourses of “the public
interest” and “social responsibility.” Departing from this fact, this study investigated cigarette
smoking company utilizes different semiotic signs to present meaning and fulfil a commercial
purpose.
Advertisement according to findings has long been a subject of several disciplines such as
semiotics and cultural studies. Ketabi (2015). Word in advertisement is said not to have
happened in isolation but occur in complex interaction with music, pictures and other text
around them. Cook (1992) cited by Ketabi (2015). Advertising or product presentation is one
of the most important genres in business. This presentation can vary depending on the
communicative situation in which they occur, but they share one main purpose which is to
persuade the addressee of the excellence of the product. Product advertisement can be done
through many means such as television, radio, jingles, talk shows, programmes, drama
According to Olaosun (2006), one and perhaps the most important duty of advertisers is to
place the message that has been designed in the appropriate medium. There are diverse forms
of media which advertisers employ to convey their message. They are exemplified by
magazines, newspaper, television, radio, outdoor hoarding and handbills, and cinema.
However, some are more popular than others. The most popular media of advertising are the
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Meanwhile, of all these media, the Billboard medium remains the medium that has the widest
coverage because, it covers the centre spectrum of population in terms of people of all ages,
income and educational levels, Ajayi (2005). It is an involuntary medium that is seen willy-
nilly, while walking, in buses, on trains, taxi-cabs, driving, at various places such as offices,
residential or commercial places, on the highways and inside the town. It reaches all classes
of people, young and old, business executives, market women, middle, upper and the lower
classes Olateju and Oyebode (2014; p,80). The adverts placed in billboard medium also have
another important edge over forms of media adverts and that is permanence. It provides an
all-year round exposure of messages to the target audience. The audience has the opportunity
to always go back and view a billboard advert at their convenience as many times as possible.
This is difficult to obtain in other media like radio and television where obtaining the
recordings of a broadcast poses a lot of challenges in terms of cost and accessibility, (Olateju
and Oyebode). Adeleke 2010 said it is that form of media that consumers encounter every
day at no cost reflecting their social, economic, culture, ideology and environmental factors,
media, billboard as a medium of advertisement, though highly expensive for the advertisers,
remains that singular media form that occupies our public space which members of the public
More also, handbills, a specific form of feature advertising, are printed advertisements used
by retailers to present their assortment, promote new products and stores, and communicate
about price specials (Miranda and Konya, 2006; Pieters et al., 2007).
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Pieters et al. (2007) and Zhang et al. (2009) have examined the effect of competitive
advertisements in handbills on attention and sales. Attention to a whole page decreases with
Olowu & Akinkurolere (2015) have worked on a multimodal discourse analysis of selected
advertisement of malaria drugs. The study identified and analysed the visual and linguistic
components associated with the selected advertisement of malaria drugs. This was with a
view to describing the essential communication devices the advertisers of such drugs have
employed. Also, Chunyu & Mengxi (2016) have worked on a multimodal discourse analysis
of Tmall’s Double Eleven Advertisement. The paper analyses visual components of the
advertisement produced by Tmall for the Double Eleven Shopping Carnival from the
meaning presented in the advertisement, the article illustrates how visual components serve
as a huge attraction to the viewers and effectively justifies the consumption behaviour by
appealing to the cultural and social state. It also sheds some light on raising the awareness of
on the viewers. More also, Upeksha (2015) from General Sir John Kotelawala Defence
Spoken English Classes in Sri Lanka. His study focuses on handbills that advertise spoken
English classes in Sri Lanka. The main reason he chooses handbills advertising spoken
English classes is that the teachers who design these handbills often attempt to break away
from the mainstream and employ new ideas, challenge current trends in order to compete
with others in the field and attract more students which in turn has provided a wide array of
handbills designed using creative and innovative language and visuals. A multi-modal
discourse analysis perspective, therefore, enabled his study to analyse not only the language
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and visuals but the ideologies behind using them as well. Thus, his aim of this project is to
analyse the language, images and ideologies used in the handbills advertising spoken English
Another researcher, Yang Yang, (2016) from School of Foreign Languages, Chang’an
the Badge of Xi’an Jiaotong University. His article aims to unravel that both literal
expression and visual imagery have the ideographic function. The analysis in his article
primarily utilizes the theoretical framework of the visual communication grammar, which is
developed by Kress & Van Leeuwen from Halliday’s systemic functional linguistics. More
also, Sarah Helen Bok, a student of the Department of Linguistics, University of the Western
Cape also did a degree project work on A Multimodal Analysis of Selected National loveLife
HIV/AIDS Prevention Campaign Texts. Her study investigates the ever-changing trends in
visual texts and images used during HIV-prevention campaigns in South Africa. The aim of
her research is to evaluate and analyse the effect of multimodal texts used in HIV/AIDS
campaigns on the understanding and interpretation by the target group, and thus gauge their
effectiveness. Using a text-based multimodal approach (Kress and van Leeuwen, 1996/2006;
Martin and Rose, 2004), her study takes into account variables such as socio-economic status,
literacy levels, language and cultural differences of readers to evaluate the efficacy of
made her thesis for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in English Linguistics under the field
Discourse in the UK. Her thesis is concerned with investigating promotional discourse types
in the UK from more than one medium with the aim of showing and comparing the
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characteristics (situational, generic, linguistic, and visual) of such discourse types, where
such features also reflect the complexity of the discourse. A few of the related works done by
scholars and researchers have been reviewed above. However, independent research has been
conducted globally on the language use, code-switching/mixing and the usage of visuals in
advertisements, not much research is done locally on billboard and poster advertisements in a
multi-modal discourse analysis perspective. This scenario brings into perception the current
research, which is a multi-modal discourse analysis of selected noodles and pasta handbills
and billboard advertisement in Osun State. The rate at which these big firms producing pastas
and noodles are trying to reach their customers and the demanding need to outsmart one
another in the sphere of marketing and persuading more customers in buying their products
have resulted in a competition among the companies to promote themselves over one another
in the service market. Since the only way to promote them is via advertising, it is worthwhile
to explore the manner in which language and visuals are strategically and innovatively
There are different approaches to analyse a text and other works but the one which will be
adopted for this study is multimodal discourse analysis. Kress (2011), van Leeuwen (2004),
Machin (2008) and many notable scholars have worked assiduously in this area of study and
have come up with the view that multimodality can really be the solution to the complicated
according to Kress and van Leeuwen (2006) is when a text achieves meaning through a
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encoded for representation to humans (Pierce 1867 cited by Omonijo 2013; p12). In Machin’s
(2007) explanation of modality, he sees modality as a way of analysing images that have
inspired by linguistic analysis allowing the reader what is offered as certain as opposed to
what is concealed. Typically, noodles handbills and billboards are multimodal in nature
2.7.1 Semiotics
The term Semiotics is the study of signs. It is concerned with the ways we represent our
world to ourselves and to others. It is a human endeavour. Humans can communicate verbally
message. Semiotics is concerned with the production and interpretation of meaning. Its main
principle is that meaning is made by the deployment of acts and objects which function as
signs in relation to other signs. The complex meaning relations that can exist between one
sign and another constitutes the system of signs. Those relations such as meronyms, co-
meronyms, antonyms, and superordination are deployed in space and time in the process of
text production.
The current theories of semiotics may be traced to two main sources. The first is Ferdinand
de Saussure (1857-1913), a Swiss linguist who described ‘semiology’ as the study of the role
of signs as part of social life. The second is Charles Sanders Peirce (1839-1914), an
American philosopher whose field of study was the ‘formal doctrine of signs’ (Chandler,
2002).
Ferdinand de Saussure is a linguist scholar who has developed the basis or groundwork of
emergence of the sign theory in the field of linguistics started when he felt that the theory of
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linguistic signs should be placed in a more general basis theory. Inspired and grounded from
that thought, he has proposed the term ‘semiology’ in a few compilations of lecture notes
taken by his students based on lectures given since 1907 to1911, which eventually have been
structuralism (Grenz, 2001). Given below are the excerpts from Saussure which are
A science that studies the life of signs within society is conceivable; it would be a part of
social psychology and consequently of general psychology; I shall call it semiology (from
Greek semeion ‘sign’). Semiology would show what constitutes signs, what laws govern
them. Since the science does not yet exist, no one can say what it would be; but it has a right
to existence, a place staked out in advance. Linguistics is only a part of the general science of
semiology; the laws discovered by semiology will be applicable to linguistics, and the latter
will circumscribe a well-defined area within the mass of anthropological facts (Leeds-
Charles Sanders Peirce is well-known as a pioneer of pragmatism doctrine who has provided
the basic in the general theory of signs through his writings, and texts that have been
compiled 25 years after his death in a single comprehensive piece of work entitled ‘Oeuvres
Completes’ (Zoest, 1991). Unlike Saussure who has introduced the term ‘semiology’, Peirce
proposed the term ‘semiotic’, which according to him is synonymous with the concept of
logic that focuses on the knowledge of human thinking process as portrayed in his writing
published in 1931/1958:
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“Logic, in its general sense, is, as I believe I have shown only another name for semiotic, the
or formal, we mean that we observe the characters of such signs as we know, and from such
an observation, by a process which I will not object to naming Abstraction, we are led to
statements, eminently fallible, and therefore in one sense by no means necessary, as to what
The main principles containing Peirce’s theory are the human mind and sign boundaries, the
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CHAPTER THREE
DATA ANALYSIS
3.1 Introduction
The brand name Indomie; INDO- Indonesia Mie- Noodles is an Indonesia company that has
over the years established itself as a household through the perfect strategizing and quality
product. They envisage a setting where hunger is easily alleviated, hence, their goal is
inferred from their tag line “instant noodles” which means noodles that is ready with no
delay.
system as language (Chandler 2002 cited by Olateju et al 2014). Applied semiotics as one of
the branches of semiotics according to Noth (1995) will be used since it specifically and
commercially encourages the aim at determining which advertisement have the best
multimodal resources, arrest the interest of the target audience and also enhance the sale of
the particular product and its daring abilities. Kress and van Leeuwen (2006) have argued that
Represented participants
Composition
Interactive participants
Modality
particularly billboards and handbills from the semiotic point of view. This present study
resources in the field mentioned above. The centre of attention of the analysis of the
26
billboards and handbills using semiotics approach will be on pictures, texts, colour, and their
placements.
TEXT A
This particular advertisement does not involve any human character as a semiotic resource,
rather, it shows an image of the brand on a red rectangular billboard which portrays an image
of the Indomie logo and their unique combination of colours. The creative combining of such
vivid colours such as red, blue, white, yellow and green has formed the roots of the brand
Indomie.
Colours are the major multimodal resource in use; chiefly, we notice the use of the colour
red; which has an eye-grabbing effect on the viewer; spanning across the rectangular
billboard, this could be in use to incite curiosity in the viewers about what the brand is trying
to sell. The Red in the logo itself could potentially refer to the silent pitch that their brand
makes product that freshens up the body, providing it with needed energy with the required
urgency. The focus of this advertisement would be said to be the nominal item “Indomie”
which is in blue colour which could be indicative of the responsible nature the company
27
prides itself on. The lettering ‘Indomie’ is portrayed in a unique font which hints the viewers
Introducing another semiotic resource through the use of the colour Yellow which is intended
to associate their customers with the happiness their taste buds enjoy when they eat their
product, it incites cheerful attitude from the consumer, making an underlying statement that if
you want to be happy; you should try their product. The advent usage of green represents
what should be a vital part of any function of food; green here represents growth, indicative
that their product constitutes of natural supplements that aid growth in their targeted age
group of the economy. It also shadows the claim of the company indicating stability in the
Noodle market.
The glitter and glow that the usage of the golden colour adds is to insinuate their reputation in
the noodle business as being undeniably dominant as gold commands attention hinting that
the company, apart from being confident in their products, is also one that is accorded with so
much prestige in the Nigerian economy with the added advantage of being wealthy. White
colour often regarded as the purest of colour (yin yang methodology) is utilised here. It is
noticed that the letterings ‘Instant Noodles’ and ‘Tasty Nutrition. Good For You’ are written
in white; exploiting the innocent qualities of the colour white. This exploitation is simply to
dare the viewers to test the accountability of the company and also to test the truth value of
the statements written in white lettering. The usage of capital letters for the start of each
lexicon is indicative of its importance to the brand adding the feel that they really care for the
consumers and are not selling them items that are bad for them.
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TEXT B
encounter the use of colours and human character to pass its message across. Conjured with
different semiotic resources used to advertise their brand, the semiotic resources at the top
left corner of the billboard have been amply explained above due to its similarity found in
both thereby accumulating to the fact that Indomie is a stable and prestigious company in
Nigeria whose product; consumers derive joy from when eating and that it enables the
The focus of the billboard is however on the characters at the centre, the simulation is
representative of what happens when consumers cook their product. There is foremost the
existence of a young woman who wears a smile on her face; the smile is attributive to the
contentment she derives from the emotional state of the other participant. The other
participant shapes up in form of a young girl who is seated in front of plate full of cooked
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Indomie with a mouthful already in her hand; she wears a smile also that embodies her
excitement at the sight of the food; this makes the assumption right about the fact that she has
The plate of Indomie is garnished also with green veggies which serve as a supplement of
nutrients and vitamins also gotten from Indomie. This addition grants way for an inquisition,
is eating Indomie alone not sufficient to supply the body the needed nutrients and vitamins?
There is also a cup of water which is there arguably to educate the consumers of their product
on the important role it plays firstly in breaking down the food supplement into tiny bits and
Inclusive are the words in the advertisement that serves as another semiotic resource: 'You
Like No Other’ definitely means there is no duplicate of the ‘you’. The ‘You’ could however
mean two entities; one which is presumably the mother and this remark is sort of gratitude to
the mother for being an invaluable woman providing the child with what makes her happy.
The other interpretation for the tagline ‘You Like No Other’ is in reference to the product;
Indomie, highlighting its status as being indispensable and that it has no rivalry. The
illumination behind the tagline is probably to say that starting your day with Indomie
The perceived age gap between the characters portrayed in to indicate to consumers that their
Indomie product is of more benefit to a child than a grown person, the material used in the
clothe of the mother is to showcase the pride the mother has in her culture and also to state
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TEXT C
The brand logo which is square like in shape is positioned at the top end of the left hand side.
It comprises of 3 different colours: Red which symbolises warmth, affection and care. Colour
Yellow which interprets optimism, cheerfulness and excitement while Green as a colour
connotatively means nature, renewal and fertility. The summary of the colours interprets that
the product being advertised helps to develop consumers mentally, makes one lively, aid
fertility, brings and reflect love and care. The combination also interprets the nutritional facts
of the product. Also the background colour of the product is black: a colour that interprets
elegance and sophistication, revealing how refined and portrays the beauty of the new
and precision.
Adjacent the logo are facts and information about the product. This is written with white
colour which means purity and truth. The design like logo drawn in gold colour is seen next.
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Written on it is the word introducing in black colour. A bright star is seen shining above the
design. This can be interpreted as the essence and unique taste of the product. The name of
the new Indomie brand is written in a stylistic manner which makes it more outstanding and
foregrounded. RELISH, the brand name is a pleasant taste, flavour that gratifies the palate,
hence, enjoyable quality: power of pleasing... A cooked or picked sauce usually made with
Next are two different types of the new brand product as would be seen and bought by
consumers. One is places at the right hand side while the other is at the left hand side of the
handbill. The design sample on the right hand side seems to have more seasonings than the
latter. Also it consists of real fish chunks as could be detected from its name 'Relish seafood
Delight 'Inside the pack are seasonings like fish powder, fish chunks, chilli powder,
seasoning powder and seasoning oil. All these ingredients are well placed at the front of the
The picture of the already cooked Indomie will make one salivate and crave for the real
product. The addition of all seasonings which wasn't present in other Indomie products make
it distinct and go in line with the name given it; THE COMPLETE MEAL EXPERIENCE.
Right beside the left side of the Relish seafood delight is the 'Relish Chicken Extravaganza'.
This serves as an option for those that could not or does not want to go for the seafood delight
because of a reason or the other. It also comprises of three different seasonings like Chicken
which is the sauce, chicken sausage, mama's sauce and pepper. The mixed and garnished
seasonings are placed forward for consumers to view clearly and be satisfied. The product is
well cooked to illustrate the perfect picture and to answer the question ruminating the mind of
the consumers of how the product will look like when cooked. Beneath the edge of the
handbill reads 'Now available in your neighbourhood supermarkets and stores'. The producers
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are using the medium to make consumers aware that the new product is now enormously
TEXT D
This handbill has a cartoon of a school boy holding a pen. A child that is well fed with
'Indomie Super pack' which is one of the products of Indomie noodles. The boy did an
analysis of the nutritional facts that could be found in the product. Indomie, a type of noodles
with the slogan 'Tasty nutrition. Good for you.' is very popular among youth especially and
adult, an instant food that could be served within 5 minutes of preparation. We are made
known by the boy in the handbill that it is Indomie day in his school. The analysis is done in
a chronological order using circle as the driving wheel. A circle is drawn and there revolves
33
First is protein. According to medical report, proteins help to repair worn out tissues in the
system of man and then makes it functions well. It helps in rapid growth and helps children
develop healthily. It is drawn in a green circle where green symbolises fertility and growth,
nature and enabling environment. The protein itself is written in black depicting
sophistication and elegance. The regularity in the boy's growth shows the presence of
Next is the Vitamin B. Report made it known that Vitamins generally helps to fight against
diseases in the body and then makes the body perfectly stable. Vitamin B as a distinct type of
Vitamin helps to develop mental strength. This means that children fed with Indomie instant
noodles will be mentally strong and healthy. Their mental state will be more active and
sensitive compare to children without Indomie noodles in their immune. The boy mental state
Calcium is next in the nutritional fact. Calcium naturally and medically is known to makes
the teeth and bones strong. The muscles and different joints in the body become more stronge
when there is more intake of calcium. Children growing teeth have strong teeth when they are
well fed with food substances that contain high amount of calcium. Indomie noodles give
calcium and thereby make the consumer's bones and teeth stronger. The calcium fact is
placed in a yellow circle interpreting that it all gives excitement and optimism, cheerfulness
and intellect. The boy full and well set of teeth and the strong bone reflect the effectiveness of
An important part of Vitamin that is very essential for both young and adult is the Vitamin A.
Vitamin A helps to provide good vision. This means that when someone consumes food that
has enough Vitamin A, good eyesight is assured and attained. Morning blindness, long and
short sightedness will not disturb someone that has enough Vitamin A in his or her body. The
34
Vitamin A fact is paced in a blue circle with means naturalness. The sky is blue and clear so
people taking Indomie instant noodles will have good and clear eyesight. All the four
nutrients derived from this product are demonstrated in the boy. The boy is seen with a big
and clear eyeball depicting the essence of Vitamin A in his body. Finally, the boy said' I'M
TEXT E
The Indomie poster shows a picture of a type of Indomie Instant Noodles (Oriental Fried
Noodles) which becomes the object of attraction of the poster advertisement. The picture of
the Oriental Fried Noodles is the focus of the advertisement, which is expected to direct the
viewers’ interest to the noodles, the brand, and the content, including the flavour and the
35
The first thing on the picture is however the brand and her slogan ‘Tasty Nutrition. Good For
You.’ At the top centre margin to show the brand’s high ranking. There are several words
printed on the picture of the noodle. The words Oriental Fried Noodles which is the name, is
printed in yellow and white with the red background using the biggest font of all the other
words on the picture. Right below the name is a plate of the meal served, a picture of what
the noodles when cooked should look like. The plate being white signifies truthfulness and on
the rim of the plate is a logo carrying the slogan of the brand and the phrase ‘Suggested
Garnishing’ to emphasise that an individual’s noodles might not look exactly like the plate
except if complimented with the same garnishing. The clause ‘CONTAINS FRIED
VEGETABLES’ is written in capitals using smaller font and in white with a red background.
The white represents honesty that the noodles truly contains the vegetables and the red
background represents the spice and passionate taste the vegetables are expected to result in
and also, the picture of the fried vegetables is made evident in the plate.
The noun phrase ‘STANDARD PACK’ which refers to the size is written in capitals and
embolden in white to show the honesty in its package with a background which seems like a
sticky note which is used to state emphasis and remembrance at a corner of the plate as well.
The compositions of the inscription on the poster are as follows: The brand, product name
and product information. The brand is placed on the top left margin that can be seen in the
figure and directly under the brand is the slogan ‘Tasty Nutrition. Good For You’. The
placement of the brand in that position indicates ideal and given values (Kress & van
Leeuwen, 2006), it signifies that the product wants to be the model in its group.
The product name is on the right top margin serving as a highlight of the products feature.
The product information ‘MORE VEGGIES GREAT TASTE’ is put on the left bottom part,
suggesting the real and given information about the product (Kress & van Leeuwen, 2006) as
MORE and GREAT TASTE are written in red to show intensity and VEGGIES is written in
36
green to show the natural state of vegetables (which are displayed around the picture of the
noodle as a way of showing vegetables to be salivated for in the meal). The right bottom part,
however, is left empty. The background colour of the poster is a gradation of orange, amber
and yellow. Orange may symbolise playfulness and warmth, gold may symbolise quality and
value and yellow may symbolise warmth, cheer, happiness and energy (Herman Cerrato).
The organisation of these background colours and their meanings represents the value, fun
Finally, the interactive participants signal three kinds of connections: (1) the connection
between the Indomie authors, the advertisement creators, and the items (image of the noodles,
the brand name, the product information and inscription on the noodles and on the ads, the
veggies, and colour) that are placed in the advertisement. (2) The connection between the
picture of the noodles, the writing, the background colour, the font size, and the colour, and
(3) the connection between the Indomie Oriental Fried noodles advertisement and the
targeted audience. It is noted that the relationship between the brand authors, advertisement
creators, and the targeted readership is reflected in the objects and script put on the poster
(Kress & van Leeuwen, 2006). The Oriental Fried noodles advertisement put the entity, i.e.,
37
TEXT F
It is interesting that the poster in TEXT F does not advertise any size or flavour of Indomie
noodles per se but rather, a game associated to the Indomitables pack. At this point, it is
expected to state that the Indomitables pack is highly noted and popularised because of its
Bigboy, Stretchy and Swifty are known to fight the ‘bad guys’ whom can act as terrorists or
Tweeny is known for her flight; this flight ability signifies the lightness yet quality of the
Indomitable noodles. Her colours are yellow and orange which signifies happiness, ease of
tension and creativity, warmth and energy. Vision as another character is known for his
powerful sight which is a reflection of the nutritional value of Indomie noodles. Having red to
38
signify power and passion, yellow to signify his enlightenment and optimism and black
colour signifies protection and potential abilities. His glasses however signify the intensity of
his powerful sight as even the rays of the power in his vision can still be seen through the
glasses.
Bigboy is known for his strength, another nutritional value of Indomie noodles, his colours
are blue and yellow which signify growth and optimism respectively. His red cap however
symbolises power and love and his red gloves represents the passion and power in his
strength. Stretchy is known for his flexibility which can also symbolise the curly strands of
Indomie noodles. His colours are green and red which stands for harmony, compassion and
passion respectively. Swifty is known for her speed and her colours are orange and yellow
which represents creativity and ease of tension. It should be noted that these characters all
have the same girdle with a gradation of yellow and amber, the icon of Indomitables I is
strategically placed at the centre in orange colour to represent the warmth around
Indomitables and the home feeling. The same icon is also placed as a badge in blue colour as
a short form of Indomie, just as is in the product's logo. The blue colour signifies the integrity
Another great important and significant thing in the poster are ways to download the games
by strategically placing the url directly under the icon of the game application, a barcode,
which would lead directly to the application download page and right below the barcode is
where the game can be downloaded- on Google Play. All routes to downloading the game are
systematically highlighted on the left margin of the poster which makes it all very visible
since they are all of a related family. On the right bottom margin is a picture of a gadget
displaying a preview of the game. In the picture, Bigboy is noticed and a bad guy and for
strength, plates of Indomie noodles are place also on the track line.
39
In conclusion, the main message of the poster is boldly written in the biggest fonts of the
poster in order to draw attention to its content. It states ‘DOWNLOAD The Indomitable
TEXT G
individual and some inscriptions written on the billboard with the background colours which
become the focus of attention of the billboard advertisement. There are several words printed
on the billboard which suggest the intention of the brand towards their customers. The
background of the billboard is a mixture of orange and yellow colour on which there are
images of some super heroes with the inscription ‘The Indomitables’ written below their legs
in the blue colour with a touch of white colour. Semiotically, the mixture of orange and
yellow for the background represent youthfulness, energetic, healthy, strength and vitality
[Adams & Osgood (1973)]. The use of these colours for background by the brand implies that
the Indomie brand wants to create a kind of attention to the viewers of the billboard, thereby
using sharp colours in order to attract and call their attention to the qualities and features of
their product. The yellow colour in the background of the billboard is more like a golden
colour which shines and interests the viewers of the billboard. If we consider the colour to be
40
a yellow golden colour, the intention is to make people want to savour their product. Bright
colours are known to be appealing, and are commonly used in the kitchen. Therefore, the
brand puts forward the savoury quality of their product. With yellow being the colour of the
sun, which is rich in vitamin, the brand represents the product as one which is rich in
vitamins and other nutrients that can help in the growth and development of humans
irrespective of age group. This means that the human can derive strength and vitality which
bring about sound health and youthful look whenever they eat the Indomie Noodles.
At the top left corner of the billboard is the presentation of the image of the brand’s logo. The
background colour of the Indomie logo is a gradation of red, yellow and green. According to
Olateju et al, 2014, green may suggest nature, fertility and youth, red suggests strength and
yellow suggests vitality. On the background of the logo is a word “Indomie” written in big
italicised font and printed with blue colour with white outline. Here the use of blue in
presenting the products name may suggest intelligence and stability. The touch of white may
suggest purity and goodness. Here the representation of these colours as presented by the
brand may mean that the brand tries to give or show the viewers briefly the tasty qualities and
the good benefit of consuming their products. The brand tries to show the viewers through the
gradation of the colours that the product is made up of natural and pure ingredients which can
in one way or the other help in giving the human body the required strength and nourishment.
The touch of white on the blue which suggests purity may be used by the brand to clear the
mind(s) of the viewer(s) that nothing toxic or harmful is added to the ingredients rather a
product with natural ingredients which brings about healthiness. Also, the brand’s
presentation of the product name in bigger and italicised font may suggest that the product is
not an ordinary noodle, instead it is a brand of noodles which offers several important
benefits for human health unlike other noodle companies products. “Instant Noodles” is
written with white colour below the product name of a green background.
41
Also, the inscription “Instant Noodles” which is printed in white colour also calls attention
beyond the normal meaning. As a semiotic resource, white suggests truth and purity. As the
phrase is written on the billboard, from our intuition, the phrase connotes meanings. The first
meaning of the phrase suggests that Indomie is a product which is always available anytime
the consumers want to purchase it. It is a ready-made product that is up for sale anytime and
anywhere across the nation. The second intuition to the phrase is that Indomie is a fast food
which takes about three to five minutes to cook. It is a product that is available across the
country therefore serving as a means of uniting the people of the country and enhancing the
Some inscriptions on the billboard are written with the biggest font while directing these
inscriptions towards five (5) super heroes as they are presented on the billboard. According to
the research we have made, we have discovered that Indomie Instant Noodles is a household
name in Nigeria and since their main target is to stamp their authority as every child’s
favourite brand and by so doing they have decided to identify and come up with something
these children all love and that is cartoon (super hero). The result of coming up with
something cool for the children now leads to the birth of the five Indomie super heroes which
are represented and called “The Indomitables” on the billboard. Looking at the phrase “The
Indomitables” which is printed in blue with touch of white colour and presented in bigger
form makes it more obvious or easy to be discovered by the viewers. The word “Indomitable”
means undefeatable, unstoppable, or undaunted, that is, being full of strength, zeal. These
characters are children who eat Indomie Noodles and gain their super powers as a result of
the nutritional benefit of Indomie Noodles. This is aimed towards encouraging children to eat
only Indomie Noodles as they are sure to become super heroes like The Indomitable. The
word “Indomitable” is also similar to “Indomie” both in spelling and pronunciation. This
similarity makes the brand more preferable as children notice it and believe to become one of
42
the Indomitables. Just like the Indomitables, children are guaranteed strength, zeal, and
vitality when they eat only Indomie Noodles. The inscription “Come have fun with us!” is a
direct speech of the characters. This creates a sense of belonging to the consumers of Indomie
Noodles as they are invited exclusively by The Indomitable. The posture of the characters
shows they are energetic and having fun, hence, the inscription. By the inscription, it is
assumed that the viewers eat Indomie Noodles. This also pushes those who do not eat
Indomie noodles to start so as to be a part of the fun. The inscription implies a subtle
command, ordering children to eat Indomie Noodles. It has been discovered that the five (5)
superheroes/cartoons represent the amazing superpowers that match all the different nutrients
children get from eating Indomie Noodles. Starting with the first character of the superheroes
is the one called Bigboy. Mere looking at the physique of this character, we will discover that
Bigboy best suites this character. From head to toe, he represents the epitome of strength and
invincibility. He is presented in cloth of blue colour which is blended with a yellow colour.
The use of these colours semiotically calls the viewer’s attention to what is suggested by the
brand. His posture shows his high level of courage to attack and defeat any opponent or
circumstance that comes his way. The brand presents him to be the “strength and courage”
Next to Bigboy is Swifty, a female superhero who is presented as a character who represents
the power of speed and agility. Her yellow dress connotes strength, optimism and vitality.
She is presented as a character that is fully determined and well-focused in achieving her
goal. So as to show how determined and focused she is, the brand present the character to be
gazing directly at the viewers why the viewers also gaze directly at her therefore giving an
information to the viewers that they can be as agile and speedy as she is, if they are ready to
taste and feel the product that nourishes her body which is Indomie noodles. Her physique
represents her superpowers, speed and agility, which are parts of the benefits children get
43
from eating Indomie noodles. Next to Swifty is another female superhero called Tweeny. She
is also presented in yellow cloth, while semiotically representing the female gender as human
beings full of vitality, strength, and of optimistic nature. These show that Indomie noodles is
not produced only for the male child but it is a product which serves both male and female
giving their body the required nutrients. Her stretched hand and posture show that she is
unstoppable and has the power of invisibility as she can pass through any body as of “matter”
effortlessly. She shows how quick-witted the children can get when they eat Indomie
Noodles. Another male character on the billboard is Vision. His yellow cloth shows positive
connotations that he is full of strength, vitality and optimism just like the others. Through his
name, we discover how focused he is in achieving his dreams. The way he looks towards the
sky shows that the character is limitless in his pursuit of greatness and he is ready to use his
strength and energy in achieving that goal. His posture shows readiness. He is presented as a
character that has ultra-super sights and releases laser through his eyes. This character as a
semiotic resource represents the power of Indomie Noodles to give good sight, as it is rich in
vitamin A.
The last male character called Stretchy represents flexibility. He is presented as a character
that embodies the natural ability to take on any shape or form. The way he stretches his left
leg depicts how sophisticated and flexible his body is. The way his body is covered with
green colour indicates the naturalness of his strength, renewal of his energy and vitality. This
implies that he has been able to take any shape or form of his choice as a result of the good
Indomie Noodles which enriches his body with the necessary vitamins and minerals. Here,
the character is used to give an information to the viewer that Indomie is a product which
gives us nice body shapes and flexibility. Since it is made from natural ingredients, it is
capable of helping in building our body to the best shape that suit us. However, these five
Indomitables who serve mainly as the focus of the billboard have been created to inspire
44
children to achieve greatness and be superheroes in their everyday life. Although the
immediate audience is the children, this creative idea also serves as a means of advertising
TEXT H
In the presentation of this billboard, different semiotic resources are put in place by the brand
so as to pass enough information to the viewers. It is discovered that all images and
different bits of meanings in an interactive manner to pass across the entire message of the
billboard. Starting with the background which is presented in no other colour but full red
colour suggests strength and brightness. The colour is also dominant in the logo of the brand
and has become their identity. The suggestion of strength in this discourse environment
means that Indomie Noodles is a product which gives the body the required energy and
complete nutrients when eaten. The suggestion of brightness describes the high rate of
attention and popularity Indomie noodles has gained in the country over the years as the best
noodle brand in Nigeria. So, the colour attracts the viewers to read over and understand the
information being passed across through the billboard about Indomie Noodles.
45
At the top centre of this billboard is the brand's logo, which includes the name and the
tagline. As discussed in the analysis of the former billboard, the background of the logo is
presented through the gradation of three different colours (red, yellow, and green). The red
colour here suggests Indomie Noodles as a product which serves as energy builder for the
body. The colour therefore shows the strength being derived from the product. The green
colour also suggests nature, agriculture, fertility and youth while the yellow colour depicts
vitality. A text or word which serves as the company's name is presented in italicised, bigger
font and printed in blue colour with white outline. The presentation of the brand's name in
blue colour suggests intelligence and stability of the company thereby telling the viewers that
Indomie Noodles is a product of quality. It also shows Indomie Noodles as a "here to stay"
product in Nigeria therefore showing the stability and relentless nature of the brand in
producing good and quality product for the customers which can never be shaken or
undermine by other noodle brands in the country. Putting the brand's name at the top centre
of the billboard shows that Indomie noodles is a household name which can be reckoned with
by everyone across the country. The placement of the brand's name and logo at the top centre
of the billboard indicates ideal and given values (Kress & van Leeuwen, 2006). Moreover, it
signifies that the product wants to be the model in its group. The white outline on the blue
colour shows the true value of what is suggested above. The use of italics for the word calls
the viewer's attention to the uniqueness of the product. Below the brand’s name is a phrase
“instant noodles”. Although this phrase is separated from the brand’s name, it is to be said
along with it. The phrase qualifies the brand’s name and describes the product in detail. It is
placed on the green background to show that the product which is “Noodles” is made of
organic ingredients. Under the logo is a tagline "Tasty Nutrition. Good For You" which is
printed in white colour. The colour shows the truthfulness in the presentation of the product
as a delicious product, full of pleasant flavour and resources which give the body the required
46
nutrients easily. Through the tagline, the viewers who are assumed to be their customers and
consumers are informed that the product is essential and good for their body because it tastes
delightfully, nourishes the body, and enhances growth. The pronoun “You” also indicates that
the product transcends across all age groups. The capitalisation of each word shows the
More also, another semiotic resource is located on the billboard presenting it as an inscription
boldly written with the biggest font of all and white colour. The inscription "You Like No
Other" is a catchphrase associated with the new Indomie products. It informs of the campaign
run by the brand to say that their consumers are unique and distinguishable in their own way.
It is placed at the centre of the billboard showing it as an important locus of the billboard.
The catchphrase literally means there is nobody like "you". "You'' here is used to suggest two
entities; the first is assumed to be a remark to the viewers considered as their customers,
thereby commending them and confirming their uniqueness. The second suggestion of the
inscription is in reference to the product itself. Below the catchphrase is an image of the
Indomie Noodles sachet which is presented in a mixture of green and yellow colours. The
presentation of the green colour as a semiotic resource is a pointer to the fact that Indomie is
made with natural agricultural products therefore giving insights to the viewers about the
product that it aids the body growth and helps in building youthful look. The colour yellow is
also used to express the richness of the product. The next after the Indomie Noodles sachet is
the image of a boy with an Indomie Noodles dish. The young boy is placed at the left bottom
corner of the billboard showing him as having a mouthful already in his hand. The boy gazes
directly at the viewers with a smiling expression. His facial expression depicts his mood and
shows he enjoys the dish. Gaze is regarded as one of the three important things in
shown through a close shot of his image suggesting his intimacy with the viewers. He is
47
presented in a fully grown black shiny hair. The black shiny hair may suggest sophistication,
class, and decency while his brown face may suggest brightness and youthfulness. His white
eyes and teeth show the true condition of his healthiness. All these things are used by the
brand to pass information to their targeted audience. Kress and van Leeuwen, (2006), note
that the relationship between the brand authors, advertisement creators, and the targeted
readership is reflected in the objects and script put on the billboard. The placement of young
character on the left bottom part suggests the real and given information about the functions
and features of the product (Kress & van Leeuwen, 2006). It presents the information to the
viewers that all the above suggestions of nutrients which aid body growth and development
can be got easily when Indomie Noodles is consumed by the customers. The use of English
language for the presentation of the billboard may likely be associated with the prestigious
status of English for commercial purposes (da Silva, 2014, Hsu, 2008; Martin, 2006). The use
of English however may not necessarily indicate that the major target readership is English-
speaking audience. It is a language used to carry everyone along because in the context of
Nigeria, it is a dominant and alternative language used in reaching out to and communicating
with people of different ethnic groups. We can imply that the primary target audience is the
child or young adult who wants good nutrition and healthiness which Indomie is sure to
provide.
48
TEXT I
This is another pack of Indomie Instant Noodles called HUNGRY MAN SIZE. The logo of
Indomie is at the top right hand side of the billboard. The colour coordination is deployed as
salient mechanism to establish correlations and to interpret the hidden meaning as well as the
importance of the product. A picture of a man is seen with his mouth widely opened. Also a
picture of a well prepared Hungry man size Indomie instant noodles is placed in his front.
This means that the man is really hungry and the only type of Instant noodles that can satisfy
his hunger is the new product, HUNGRY MAN SIZE. The cooked Indomie is well garnished
with chicken, egg and other important sauces. The bowl of Indomie is obviously big yet good
The words YOU WANTED MORE, YOU HAVE MORE are written in capital letter in a
foregrounded manner. These words are not just written but envision the fact that it is like an
answer to the question of the consumers. Normal Indomie noodles that has been produced
earlier are discovered not to have satisfied many people so the unconscious request to make
bigger ones. Note that in the words written in capital letters, MORE is made to be bolder and
written on a single line compared to others. This portrays that the products is an addition to
At the extreme right side of the billboard is the exact picture of how the new pack product
exactly is. This is made to aid the consumer in case they needed to buy the pack. HUNGRY
49
MAN SIZE is inscribed on the product nylon at one side with a different colour ink. The
word is written in blue, a colour known to interpret intelligence, stability and conservatism.
This means that you get to be stable and recover from your hunger state after the new
TEXT J
The billboard advertises another pack of Indomie- Super Pack. The logo of the Indomie
brand is placed at the top left corner suggesting the image of the brand. The billboard
represented participants which is important in semiotic analysis. The picture of the mother
and daughter with a smile on both their faces suggests the happiness and love associated with
yellow which hints at the happiness and excitement attached to a mother’s love. The
inscription is written in upper case to suggest emphasis and it implies that the viewers should
be true to themselves as well as the family and the society at large. By the left side of the
picture is the inscription LIKE NO OTHER is written in white (white is known for
truthfulness) which further accepts the mother-child relationship as one like no other and
cannot be compared to anything else in the society. This can also be said that Indomie as a
50
Also on the billboard is a picture of the advertised noodles, the super pack. The name is
etched on a significant emblem-like blue background and this depicts the integrity of the pack
size among all other Indomie packs. The blue background is further made to settle on a
picture of the noodles when served. The noodle is served in a white plate which indicates that
By the left edge of the picture of the noodles pack is a tag which says BUY. This hints at the
sole aim of creating the billboard which is to get people to patronise the brand and buy the
product.
The background of the billboard is a gradation of red colour which indicates the love brought
to be society by a mother’s love, especially a mother who further shows love by nurturing a
51
CHAPTER FOUR
INTRODUCTION
This chapter of the research is the concluding part which entails summary of the work,
SUMMARY
This research work contains four chapters. The first chapter is an introduction to the
background to the study, statement of research, aim and objectives, scope of the study,
procedures employed for data gathering and research work. The sampling method was
The second chapter explores the literature review of the work. The theoretical framework and
review of related work. The theory of social semiotics is adopted in analysing the signs that
FINDINGS
The findings of this work is based on handbills and billboards of Indomie noodles. Their
CONCLUSION
The logical deduction gotten from the analysis of Indomie billboards and handbills
advertisements is Indomie company that has a firmly rooted herself in the Nigerian noodles
business, making products for children and adult which foster growth and happiness. The
52
lucidity gotten from the semiotic analysis of these are to boldly proclaim the fact that
Indomie is a reputable brand, her transparency, values and ability to produce variety of top-
notch products makes it unravelled and a company whose continuous rise cannot be envisage.
53
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APPENDIX
TEXT A
TEXT B
61
TEXT C
62
TEXT D
TEXT E
63
64
TEXT F
65
TEXT G
TEXT H
66
TEXT I
TEXT J
67