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The text is largely set syllabically, with a few short melismas.
In them, Appeldoorn used simple tonal melodies and set the texts predominantly syllabically.
The only time obstruents are used syllabically in English is in onomatopoeia, such as sh!
The traditional story for the origin of the medieval Sequence is that it came from text added to the jubilus syllabically.
In his 1914 publication, Sounds of the Language, he promotes writing Hangul linearly rather than syllabically.
Cued speech renders English syllabically by using 32 signs, all shown near the face, for most of the phonemes that make up everyday speech.
In 1844, Henry Clay could choose a running mate so syllabically endowed that their campaign song became a classic: "Hurray!
Boobams (bamboo reversed syllabically) are tuned bongos constructed with a shell of natural bamboo.
In the Maya hieroglyphics writing system, the representation of the word ajaw could be as either a logogram, or spelled-out syllabically.
Many of the motets are settings of the Psalms, characterized by continuous points of imitation, with the beginnings of each phrase set syllabically.
For example, in one common pattern many verb and noun roots are given by logographs, while their grammatical affixes were written syllabically, much like modern Japanese.
Paul Hillier, the foremost scholar of Pärt's music, theorizes these syllabically derived melodies in terms of four different modes, outlined below.
Shōmyō is a kind of chanting of Buddhist scriptures syllabically or melismatically set to melodic phrasing, usually performed by a male chorus.
Ordo Virtutum is written in dramatic verse and contains 82 different melodies, which are set more syllabically than Hildegard's liturgical songs.
Kuuma spelled syllabically backwards after Makuu, a space crime organization of the original Space Sheriff Series, Gavan.
The music sets the text syllabically, with careful regard for diction, and contains pauses where a speaker would naturally stop for breath; and it is entirely through-composed, without repetition or redundancy.
One particular piece, 'O Maria Virginei,' is set very syllabically and is repetitive, and when we started working on it our mouths were dying - we could barely get the syllables out.
Conan Doyle graciously declined the offer, but Derleth, despite having never been to London, set about finding a name that was syllabically reminiscent of Sherlock Holmes, and wrote his first set of pastiches.