Structural linguistics got it right on several counts, Lévi-Strauss argued. First, it focuses on what he calls the ‘unconscious infrastructure’ of language, something about which the speakers themselves may have no clue. Second, it locates meaning not in terms themselves – ‘cat is cat’ (meow) – but in relations between terms – ‘cat, not dog’ (meow, not woof). Third, such relations are situated within a system; it is ordered and structured. And finally, it seeks to locate general laws