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{{User:Ganaram inukshuk/Template:Rewrite draft|MOS scale|compare=https://en.xen.wiki/w/Special:ComparePages?page1=MOS+scale&rev1=&page2=User%3AGanaram+inukshuk%2FMOS+scale&rev2=&action=&diffonly=&unhide=
{{User:Ganaram inukshuk/Template:Rewrite draft|MOS scale|compare=https://en.xen.wiki/w/Special:ComparePages?page1=MOS+scale&rev1=&page2=User%3AGanaram+inukshuk%2FMOS+scale&rev2=&action=&diffonly=&unhide=
|changes=general rewrites; definition; wrangle different ways to say "mos"
|changes=general rewrites; definition; wrangle different ways to say "mos"
}}An '''MOS''' (sometimes '''mos'''; originally pronounced "em-oh-ess," but sometimes also pronounced "moss"; plural '''MOSes''' or '''mosses''') or '''moment of symmetry''' is a [[periodic scale]] in which every interval except for the [[period]] comes in two sizes. See the [[catalog of MOS]].
}}A '''moment-of-symmetry scale''' (commonly written as '''MOS scale''', '''MOSS''', or '''MOS''', pronounced "em-oh-ess"; also spelled as '''mos''', pronounced "moss"; plural '''MOSes''' or '''mosses''') is a type of periodic scale.
==Example: the diatonic scale==
==Example: the diatonic scale==
The [[5L 2s|diatonic scale]] is a classic example of an MOS scale. It has 7 steps: 5 large ones (whole tones) and 2 small ones (semitones). As a shorthand, the large step is denoted with 'L' and the small step with 's', so the diatonic scale may be abbreviated [[5L 2s]]. Writing out the pattern of the major mode, we get LLsLLLs. The other modes are rotations of this pattern (e.g. LsLLsLL is the minor mode.) An important property of MOS scales is that all the intervals come in two sizes: major and minor seconds, major and minor thirds, perfect and augmented fourths, perfect and diminished fifths, etc. This is not true for something like the melodic minor scale (LsLLLLs), which has three kinds of fifths: perfect, diminished and augmented. Therefore, the melodic minor scale is not an MOS scale.
The [[5L 2s|diatonic scale]] is a classic example of an MOS scale. It has 7 steps: 5 large ones (whole tones) and 2 small ones (semitones). As a shorthand, the large step is denoted with 'L' and the small step with 's', so the diatonic scale may be abbreviated [[5L 2s]]. Writing out the pattern of the major mode, we get LLsLLLs. The other modes are rotations of this pattern (e.g. LsLLsLL is the minor mode.) An important property of MOS scales is that all the intervals come in two sizes: major and minor seconds, major and minor thirds, perfect and augmented fourths, perfect and diminished fifths, etc. This is not true for something like the melodic minor scale (LsLLLLs), which has three kinds of fifths: perfect, diminished and augmented. Therefore, the melodic minor scale is not an MOS scale.