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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

one
or
more
moras,
and
longer
vowels
or
codas
may
add
additional
moras.
For
example,
under
typical
mora-timed
analyses,
a
simple
CV
syllable
may
be
1
mora,
while
a
CV
with
a
coda
consonant
can
be
2
moras.
The
overall
tempo
of
utterances
then
aligns
with
mora
cycles,
producing
a
rhythm
that
can
feel
more
uniform
across
syllables
of
different
shapes.
subject
of
scholarly
debate
and
may
involve
hybrid
patterns.
The
mora-timing
framework
is
used
to
contrast
with
syllable-timed
and
stress-timed
models
of
rhythm,
highlighting
how
timing
units
influence
perception,
timing
in
phonetic
realization,
and
phonological
theory.
prosodic
annotation.
Critics
note
that
real
languages
often
display
intermediate
or
mixed
rhythmic
patterns,
making
strict
categorization
an
approximation
rather
than
a
universal
rule.
See
also
mora,
prosody,
rhythm
in
language,
syllable-timed
languages,
stress-timed
languages.