copy and paste this google map to your website or blog!
Press copy button and paste into your blog or website.
(Please switch to 'HTML' mode when posting into your blog. Examples: WordPress Example, Blogger Example)
phonology - What is a mora? - Linguistics Stack Exchange Roughly, a mora is half a heavy syllable, or all of a light one -- in languages where syllables are classed as open short light (1 mora) or closed long heavy (2 morae) Example: regular Classical Latin stress goes on the third mora from the end of the word; regular Spanish stress goes on the second mora from the end (with some special
Mora County, NM population by year, race, more | USAFacts Our Changing Population: Mora County, New Mexico The ages, races, and population density of Mora County, New Mexico tell a story Understand the shifts in demographic trends with these charts visualizing decades of population data
Mora County, New Mexico coronavirus cases and deaths From cities to rural towns, stay informed on where COVID-19 is spreading to understand how it could affect families, commerce, and travel Follow new cases found each day and the number of cases and deaths in Mora County, New Mexico This page will be updated with the most recent data as frequently as possible
phonology - What is the explanatory value of moras: why do we need . . . In Arabic, coda consonants do; in Mongolian, they don't Following the classical "long vowels are equivalent to two vowels" analysis, a mora is thus "vowel", plus optionally "one coda consonant" There are a number of problems that led to widespread adoption of moraic theory
phonology - If mora are potentially sufficient to describe language . . . The question that exists in phonological theory regarding syllables, moras and so forth is, what is the required collection of suprasegmental units required to describe human language phonological grammars Practically speaking, this means, "do we need all of the set {skeletal position, mora, onset, rhyme, nucleus, coda, margin, syllable}?"
The relationship between Mora-timed languages, long vowels and . . . The concept "mora" is widely invoked as a device for making sense of this typology First, it is presumed that the segmental concept "long" is to be represented with a distinctive mora (a vowel with two moras is long and a short vowel has only one; a long consonant has a mora and a short consonant has none) See Morén 1999 for discussion That
phonology - Does the analysis of syllables via mora imply that syllable . . . A mora is an object which allows the possibility of representational contrastiveness, so if a language has short and long vowels, that can be represented via one versus two moras on a vowel That does not necessarily imply anything about production or perception, unless you subscribe to a theory where representational objects necessarily have
How would a haiku look in English using morae? The structure of English and Japanese syllables are so different that it's impossible to count the mora weight of every possible English syllable using the Japanese criteria of mora counting E g , the English 1-syllable word 'string' is perceived by the Japanese as having five syllables of 1 mora each: su-to-ri-n-gu (ストリング), and 5
Linguistic typology of isochrony and intonation A mora is basically a unit of syllabic "weight" used in the analysis of a language, that may or may not constitute a full syllable on its own A single syllable can have one or more morae Typically, the onset (first part) of a syllable is weightless, and thus does not contribute any morae to the syllable
syllables - Is Swahili a Mora-counting language like Japanese . . . Neither of these conditions holds in Swahili, so it is impossible to determine if the language is syllable-timed or mora-timed However: the claim for there being any "mora-counting" Bantu languages is dubious The implication of mora-counting is that a 4-mora word has twice the duration of a 2-mora word and half the duration of an 8-mora word