moratiming
Moratiming, or mora timing, is a concept in phonology and prosody that describes a way of organizing the rhythm of speech around morae, rather than around syllables or stress patterns alone. A mora is a unit of temporal length used to count timing in segments of speech. In mora-timed languages, each mora tends to have a relatively uniform duration, so the rhythm of speech is governed by the number of moras in a sequence rather than by syllable count alone.
In practical terms, moratiming assigns mora counts to syllables: short vowels or consonant clusters can contribute
Languages such as Japanese are commonly cited as exhibiting mora-timed rhythm, though actual rhythm is the
Applications of moratiming appear in linguistic analysis, phonological theory, and speech technology, including text-to-speech systems and