Talk:mora

Earliest Usenet uses via Google Groups (for the linguistics term) &mdash; Hippietrail 14:04, 7 Feb 2005 (UTC)
 * mora: soc.culture.japan - Jun 6 1989, 4:48 pm by David Gast
 * I always [sic] that a 3 mora name with the last mora "o" is a male name.
 * moras: sci.lang.japan - Jul 16 1990, 8:44 pm by David A. Johns
 * Jorden's transcription, with its double vowels, represents moras just as accurately as kana does -- in fact better, since it represents tya as one mora rather than two.
 * moraic: sci.lang.japan - Jun 24 1991, 3:27 pm by Gerald B. Mathias
 * No such word-distinguishing drop in pitch occurs at the end of a long vowel or after a "syllabic" (= moraic) n, although one is free to stress those locations, as in "doO-to ittandayo, doU-de nakute..."
 * morae (list context): sci.lang.japan - Jul 7 1992, 12:35 pm by Claude Huss
 * morae: sci.lang.japan - Jul 7 1992, 10:35 am by Stavros Macrakis
 * Actually, Japanese has about 50 morae (kana), but more like 20-25 phonemes (depending on definitions).
 * moraically: humanities.classics - Aug 31 2001, 6:16 pm by Rich Alderson
 * To bring this to a Classical context, the Latin accent is assigned moraically (drop the last syllable and accent the second mora from what's left), but as a stress accent affects the entire syllable.
 * moraiclly: rec.climbing - Oct 22 2001, 10:33 pm by Shilajit T Gangulee
 * The whole 5-7-5 shit is grade-school crap. Haiku metric stress is counted moraiclly, not by syllables.
 * moraicly: rec.climbing - Oct 23 2001, 10:03 am by Mike Yukish
 * His was a spelling mistake. It should be "moraicly"

RFV
Rfv-sense: as a Spanish noun meaning “mole” (in the sense of “dark spot on the skin”). The second-oldest tagged RFV, but seemingly never listed. —Ruakh TALK 20:53, 1 February 2011 (UTC)
 * Sense added by Nadando (very experienced Spanish editor) tagged by Hippietrail (not so experienced). I'll bet it's valid. Mglovesfun (talk) 23:50, 1 February 2011 (UTC)
 * I've added two citations. In retrospect, both could possibly mean 'mulberry'. It says in the form of a so I suppose cells in the form of a mole is more likely, but in the form of a mulberry is not impossible either. Mglovesfun (talk) 00:07, 2 February 2011 (UTC)
 * Nope, sorry, both are mulberries. One is describing Mott cells, which in English are also called "morular cells" because they look like mulberries, and the other is translating an English text with the word "mulberry". BTW, is it supposed to be common knowledge what mulberries look like? Because I had no idea until I checked Wikipedia just now. —Ruakh TALK 03:34, 2 February 2011 (UTC)
 * Wish I knew where I got "mole" from... I can't find anything that related to skin that isn't "looks like a mulberry" or equivalent. Nadando 23:30, 3 February 2011 (UTC)
 * I can't find anything, either. and  and  get plenty of relevant hits, but  and  and  don't seem to get any. (But admittedly, my Spanish is not great, and it takes me some effort to scan the page looking for hits in a desired sense. It's quite possible that I missed some.) —Ruakh TALK 01:04, 4 February 2011 (UTC)
 * Not in Spanish Wiktionary. DAVilla 09:33, 9 February 2011 (UTC)
 * RFV-failed, but "forma de mora" quotations kept. - -sche (discuss) 08:46, 10 August 2011 (UTC)