User:Ganaram inukshuk/TAMNAMS Extension: Difference between revisions
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== Naming mos descendants == | == Naming mos descendants == | ||
To name mosses that have more than 10 notes, rather than giving mosses unique names, names are based on how they're related to another (named) mos. | To name mosses that have more than 10 notes, rather than giving mosses unique names, names are based on how they're related to another (named) mos. | ||
*A child mos is a ''chromatic mos'' | *A child mos is a ''chromatic mos'', ''chromatic (mos name).'' | ||
*A grandchild mos is an ''enharmonic mos'' | *A grandchild mos is an ''enharmonic mos'' or ''enharmonic (mos name)''. | ||
*A great-grandchild mos is a ''subchromatic mos'' | *A great-grandchild mos is a ''subchromatic mos'' or ''subchromatic (mos name)''. | ||
*A mos that is more than 3 generations away is called a ''descendant mos'' | *A mos that is more than 3 generations away is called a ''descendant mos'' or ''(mos name) descendant''. | ||
These phrases may also be shortened by adding the mos's prefix to the terms chromatic, enharmonic, subchromatic, or descendant respectively, if the named mos has no more than 3 periods. | These phrases may also be shortened by adding the mos's prefix to the terms ''chromatic'', ''enharmonic'', ''subchromatic'', or ''descendant'' respectively, if the named mos has no more than 3 periods. Additionally, the terms ''chromatic'', ''enharmonic'', and ''subchromatic'' may be used generally to refer to an entire generation of mosses (2, 4, or 8 possible mosses respectively) rather than a specific mos. The term ''descendant'' may also be used generally to refer to any mos any number of generations away from a named mos. | ||
Optionally, for the phrase ''mos descendant,'' the number of generations away from a named mos can be specified, producing the terms ''nth mos descendant'', ''nth (mos name) descendant,'' and ''nth (mos-prefix)descendant'', using the algorithm below to find ''n'': | Optionally, for the phrase ''mos descendant,'' the number of generations away from a named mos can be specified, producing the terms ''nth mos descendant'', ''nth (mos name) descendant,'' and ''nth (mos-prefix)descendant'', using the algorithm below to find ''n'': | ||
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|sinenharmonic | |sinenharmonic | ||
|} | |} | ||
== | ===Naming mos descendants by step ratio=== | ||
The designations of chromatic, enharmonic, and subchromatic by themselves does not describe a specific mos descendant. | The designations of chromatic, enharmonic, and subchromatic by themselves does not describe a specific mos descendant. The name of a step ratio range can be prefixed to the terms ''chromatic'', ''enharmonic'', and ''subchromatic'' (or ''(mos-prefix)chromatic'', ''(mos-prefix)enharmonic'', and ''(mos-prefix)subchromatic''). Specifying the step ratio is optional, and the names for step ratios can be abbreviated into a one or two-letter prefix. (Frostburn's abbreviations can be used here, too.) These prefixes are used for specific descendants, with the notable exception of ''soft'' and ''hard''. For enharmonic mosses, these describe mosses with a step ratio outside the hyposoft and hypohard range. For subchromatic mosses, these describe mosses within the entire soft and hard ranges, producing terminology more specific than just ''subchromatic'' but not as specific as the specific step ratio ranges. These prefixes must include a hyphen. | ||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
|+Descendant mosses sorted by generation and step ratio | |+Descendant mosses sorted by generation and step ratio | ||
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|} | |} | ||
==Other mos names== | ==Other mos names== | ||
This section describes additional names for mosses that have more than 10 notes but are worthy of names. | This section describes additional names for groups of mosses or for mosses or that have more than 10 notes but are worthy of names. | ||
=== Names for mos descendants with more than 5 periods === | === Names for mos descendants with more than 5 periods === | ||
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A mos linear family is a family of related mosses of the form xL (nx + y)s. This family starts with the mos xL ys, where x < y and n = 0, and continue with mosses with the same number of large steps but a linearly growing quantity of small steps. An example of such a family is the mos sequence 5L 2s, 5L 7s, 5L 12s, 5L 17s, etc, where each successive mos has 5 more small steps than the last. | A mos linear family is a family of related mosses of the form xL (nx + y)s. This family starts with the mos xL ys, where x < y and n = 0, and continue with mosses with the same number of large steps but a linearly growing quantity of small steps. An example of such a family is the mos sequence 5L 2s, 5L 7s, 5L 12s, 5L 17s, etc, where each successive mos has 5 more small steps than the last. | ||
Mosses in a linear family are based on repeated applications of the replacement ruleset L->Ls and s->s on the initial mos, and reaching the nth member of a linear family requires the initial mos have a hard or pseudocollapsed step ratio. The child mos (x+y)L xs is the start of its own linear family, which relates back to the initial mos xL ys if the initial mos has a step ratio that is soft or pseudoequalized. | |||
Names for these families describe a subset of a mos descendant family, and most mos families go by the name of ''(mos name)'' ''linear family'' or ''(mos-prefix)linear family''. | |||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
|+Names of single-period mos linear families (work-in-progress) | |+Names of single-period mos linear families (work-in-progress) | ||
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| | | | ||
|} | |} | ||
== Reasoning for names == | |||
The overall motivation for these names is to give names to closely related mosses and refer to individual mosses as some member of a broader family, rather than name individual mosses. | |||
The names for chromatic scales are based on former names for the child mosses of diatonic (5L 2s) - p-chromatic for 5L 7s and m-chromatic for 7L 5s - and was generalized to ''chromatic mos''. The term enharmonic is already in use to describe the grandchild mosses of diatonic, and so was generalized to ''enharmonic mos''. The term subchromatic is a term coined by Mike Battaglia to describe a scale that is more chromatic than either chromatic or enharmonic, and is generalized to ''subchromatic mos''. | The names for chromatic scales are based on former names for the child mosses of diatonic (5L 2s) - p-chromatic for 5L 7s and m-chromatic for 7L 5s - and was generalized to ''chromatic mos''. The term enharmonic is already in use to describe the grandchild mosses of diatonic, and so was generalized to ''enharmonic mos''. The term subchromatic is a term coined by Mike Battaglia to describe a scale that is more chromatic than either chromatic or enharmonic, and is generalized to ''subchromatic mos''. | ||
The format of adding a mos's prefix to the terms descendant, chromatic, enharmonic, and subchromatic is best applied to mosses that have no more than three periods. With mosses that descend directly from nL ns mosses especially (4L 4s and above), this is to keep names from being too cumbersome (eg, ''chromatic (number)-wood'' instead of ''(number)-woodchromatic''). | The format of adding a mos's prefix to the terms descendant, chromatic, enharmonic, and subchromatic is best applied to mosses that have no more than three periods. With mosses that descend directly from nL ns mosses especially (4L 4s and above), this is to keep names from being too cumbersome (eg, ''chromatic (number)-wood'' instead of ''(number)-woodchromatic''). | ||
Various people have suggested the use of p- and m- as prefixes to refer to specific chromatic mosses, as well as the use of f- and s- for enharmonic mosses. Generalizing the pattern to 3rd mos descendants | Various people have suggested the use of p- and m- as prefixes to refer to specific chromatic mosses, as well as the use of f- and s- for enharmonic mosses. Generalizing the pattern to 3rd mos descendants shows the letters diverging from one another, notably where m- is no longer next to p- and f- and s- are no longer along the extremes. Rather than using these letters, as well as being temperament-agnostic, prefixes based on step ratios are used instead. However, temperament-based prefixes may be used specifically for diatonic descendants as alternatives to the prefixes based on step ratios. | ||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
|+ | |+Prefixes for diatonic descendants | ||
! rowspan="2" |Diatonic scale | ! rowspan="2" |Diatonic scale | ||
! colspan="3" |Chromatic mosses | ! colspan="3" |Chromatic mosses | ||
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|- | |- | ||
!Steps | !Steps | ||
! | !Temp-based prefix | ||
!Prefix | !Prefix | ||
!Steps | !Steps | ||
! | !Temp-based prefix | ||
!Prefix | !Prefix | ||
!Steps | !Steps | ||
! | !Temp-based prefix | ||
!Prefix | !Prefix | ||
|- | |- | ||
| rowspan="8" |[[5L 2s]] | | rowspan="8" |[[5L 2s]] | ||
| rowspan="4" |[[7L 5s]] | | rowspan="4" |[[7L 5s]] | ||
| rowspan="4" |meantone | | rowspan="4" |m- (from meantone) | ||
| rowspan="4" | | | rowspan="4" |s- | ||
| rowspan="2" |[[7L 12s]] | | rowspan="2" |[[7L 12s]] | ||
| rowspan="2" |flattone | | rowspan="2" |f- (from flattone) | ||
| rowspan="2" | | | rowspan="2" |s- | ||
|[[7L 19s]] | |[[7L 19s]] | ||
|tridecimal | |t- (from tridecimal) | ||
| | |us- | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[19L 7s]] | |[[19L 7s]] | ||
|flattone | |f- (from flattone) | ||
| | |ps- | ||
|- | |- | ||
| rowspan="2" |[[12L 7s]] | | rowspan="2" |[[12L 7s]] | ||
| rowspan="2" |meantone | | rowspan="2" |m- (from meantone) | ||
| rowspan="2" | | | rowspan="2" |os- | ||
|[[19L 12s]] | |[[19L 12s]] | ||
|meanpop | |m- (from meanpop) | ||
| | |qs- | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[12L 19s]] | |[[12L 19s]] | ||
|huygens | |h- (from huygens) | ||
| | |ms- | ||
|- | |- | ||
| rowspan="4" |[[5L 7s]] | | rowspan="4" |[[5L 7s]] | ||
| rowspan="4" |pythagorean | | rowspan="4" |p- (from pythagorean) | ||
| rowspan="4" | | | rowspan="4" |h- | ||
| rowspan="2" |[[12L 5s]] | | rowspan="2" |[[12L 5s]] | ||
| rowspan="2" |pythagorean | | rowspan="2" |p- (from pythagorean) | ||
| rowspan="2" | | | rowspan="2" |oh- | ||
|[[12L 17s]] | |[[12L 17s]] | ||
|pythagorean | |p- (from pythagorean) | ||
| | |mh- | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[17L 12s]] | |[[17L 12s]] | ||
|gentle | |g- (from gentle) | ||
| | |qh- | ||
|- | |- | ||
| rowspan="2" |[[5L 12s]] | | rowspan="2" |[[5L 12s]] | ||
| rowspan="2" |superpyth | | rowspan="2" |s- (from superpyth) | ||
| rowspan="2" | | | rowspan="2" |h- | ||
|[[17L 5s]] | |[[17L 5s]] | ||
|superpyth | |s- (from superpyth) | ||
| | |ph- | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[5L 17s]] | |[[5L 17s]] | ||
|ultrapyth | |u- (from ultrapyth) | ||
| | |uh- | ||
|} | |} |
Revision as of 21:58, 28 January 2023
This is a system for describing and naming mos scales beyond the set of named TAMNAMS mosses. Both User:Frostburn (User:Frostburn/TAMNAMS Extension) and I have similar systems, with the main difference here being how mosses can be named any number of generations away from a named mos.
Naming mos descendants
To name mosses that have more than 10 notes, rather than giving mosses unique names, names are based on how they're related to another (named) mos.
- A child mos is a chromatic mos, chromatic (mos name).
- A grandchild mos is an enharmonic mos or enharmonic (mos name).
- A great-grandchild mos is a subchromatic mos or subchromatic (mos name).
- A mos that is more than 3 generations away is called a descendant mos or (mos name) descendant.
These phrases may also be shortened by adding the mos's prefix to the terms chromatic, enharmonic, subchromatic, or descendant respectively, if the named mos has no more than 3 periods. Additionally, the terms chromatic, enharmonic, and subchromatic may be used generally to refer to an entire generation of mosses (2, 4, or 8 possible mosses respectively) rather than a specific mos. The term descendant may also be used generally to refer to any mos any number of generations away from a named mos.
Optionally, for the phrase mos descendant, the number of generations away from a named mos can be specified, producing the terms nth mos descendant, nth (mos name) descendant, and nth (mos-prefix)descendant, using the algorithm below to find n:
- Let z and w be the number of large and small steps of the parent mos to be found. Assign to z and w the values x and y respectively. Let n = 0, where n is the number of generations away from zL ws.
- Let m1 be equal to max(z, w) and m2 be equal to min(z, w).
- Assign to z the value m2 and w the value m1-m2. Increment n by 1.
- If the sum of z and w is no more than 10, then the parent mos is zL ws and is n generations from the mos descendant xL ys. If not, repeat the process starting at step 2.
As diatonic (5L 2s) doesn't have a prefix, the terms chromatic, enharmonic, and subchromatic by themselves (and with no other context suggesting a non-diatonic mos) refer to 1st (child), 2nd (grandchild), and 3rd (great-grandchild) diatonic descendants. For consistency, mos descendant names apply to mosses whose child mosses exceed 10 notes. Since all mosses ultimately descend from some nL ns mos, every possible descendant up to 5 periods will be related to a named mos.
6-note mosses | Chromatic mosses | Enharmonic mosses | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pattern | Name | Patterns | Names | Patterns | Names |
1L 5s | antimachinoid | 1L 6s, 6L 1s | n/a | 1A 7B, 6A 7B | n/a |
2L 4s | malic | 2L 6s, 6L 2s | n/a | 2A 8B, 6A 8B | n/a |
3L 3s | triwood | 3L 6s, 6L 3s | n/a | 3A 9B, 6A 9B | n/a |
4L 2s | citric | 4L 6s, 6L 4s | n/a | 4A 10B, 6A 10B | n/a |
5L 1s | machinoid | 5L 6s, 6L 5s | mechromatic | 5A 11B, 6A 11B | mechenharmonic |
7-note mosses | Chromatic mosses | Enharmonic mosses | |||
Pattern | Name | Patterns | Names | Patterns | Names |
1L 6s | onyx | 1L 7s, 7L 1s | n/a | 1A 8B, 7A 8B | n/a |
2L 5s | antidiatonic | 2L 7s, 7L 2s | n/a | 2A 9B, 7A 9B | n/a |
3L 4s | mosh | 3L 7s, 7L 3s | n/a | 3A 10B, 7A 10B | n/a |
4L 3s | smitonic | 4L 7s, 7L 4s | smichromatic | 4A 11B, 7A 11B | smienharmonic |
5L 2s | diatonic | 5L 7s, 7L 5s | chromatic | 5A 12B, 7A 12B | enharmonic |
6L 1s | arch(a)eotonic | 6L 7s, 7L 6s | archeoromatic | 6A 13B, 7A 13B | archeoenharmonic |
8-note mosses | Chromatic mosses | Enharmonic mosses | |||
Pattern | Name | Patterns | Names | Patterns | Names |
1L 7s | antipine | 1L 8s, 8L 1s | n/a | 1A 9B, 8A 9B | n/a |
2L 6s | subaric | 2L 8s, 8L 2s | n/a | 2A 10B, 8A 10B | n/a |
3L 5s | checkertonic | 3L 8s, 8L 3s | checkchromatic | 3A 11B, 8A 11B | checkenharmonic |
4L 4s | tetrawood; diminished | 4L 8s, 8L 4s | chromatic tetrawood | 4A 12B, 8A 12B | enharmonic tetrawood |
5L 3s | oneirotonic | 5L 8s, 8L 5s | oneirochromatic | 5A 13B, 8A 13B | oneiroenharmonic |
6L 2s | ekic | 6L 8s, 8L 6s | ekchromatic | 6A 14B, 8A 14B | ekenharmonic |
7L 1s | pine | 7L 8s, 8L 7s | pinechromatic | 7A 15B, 8A 15B | pinenharmonic |
9-note mosses | Chromatic mosses | Enharmonic mosses | |||
Pattern | Name | Patterns | Names | Patterns | Names |
1L 8s | antisubneutralic | 1L 9s, 9L 1s | n/a | 1A 10B, 9A 10B | n/a |
2L 7s | balzano | 2L 9s, 9L 2s | balchromatic | 2A 11B, 9A 11B | balenharmonic |
3L 6s | tcherepnin | 3L 9s, 9L 3s | cherchromatic | 3A 12B, 9A 12B | cherenharmonic |
4L 5s | gramitonic | 4L 9s, 9L 4s | gramchromatic | 4A 13B, 9A 13B | gramenharmonic |
5L 4s | semiquartal | 5L 9s, 9L 5s | chtonchromatic | 5A 14B, 9A 14B | chtonenharmonic |
6L 3s | hyrulic | 6L 9s, 9L 6s | hyruchromatic | 6A 15B, 9A 15B | hyrenharmonic |
7L 2s | superdiatonic | 7L 9s, 9L 7s | armchromatic | 7A 16B, 9A 16B | armenharmonic |
8L 1s | subneutralic | 8L 9s, 9L 8s | bluchromatic | 8A 17B, 9A 17B | bluenharmonic |
10-note mosses | Chromatic mosses | Enharmonic mosses | |||
Pattern | Name | Patterns | Names | Patterns | Names |
1L 9s | antisinatonic | 1L 10s, 10L 1s | asinachromatic | 1A 11B, 10A 11B | asinenharmonic |
2L 8s | jaric | 2L 10s, 10L 2s | jarachromatic | 2A 12B, 10A 12B | jaraenharmonic |
3L 7s | sephiroid | 3L 10s, 10L 3s | sephchromatic | 3A 13B, 10A 13B | sephenharmonic |
4L 6s | lime | 4L 10s, 10L 4s | limechromatic | 4A 14B, 10A 14B | limenharmonic |
5L 5s | pentawood | 5L 10s, 10L 5s | chromatic pentawood | 5A 15B, 10A 15B | enharmonic pentawood |
6L 4s | lemon | 6L 10s, 10L 6s | lemchromatic | 6A 16B, 10A 16B | lemenharmonic |
7L 3s | dicoid, zaltertic | 7L 10s, 10L 7s | dicochromatic, zalchromatic | 7A 17B, 10A 17B | dicoenharmonic, zalenharmonic |
8L 2s | taric | 8L 10s, 10L 8s | tarachromatic | 8A 18B, 10A 18B | tarenharmonic |
9L 1s | sinatonic | 9L 10s, 10L 9s | sinachromatic | 9A 19B, 10A 19B | sinenharmonic |
Naming mos descendants by step ratio
The designations of chromatic, enharmonic, and subchromatic by themselves does not describe a specific mos descendant. The name of a step ratio range can be prefixed to the terms chromatic, enharmonic, and subchromatic (or (mos-prefix)chromatic, (mos-prefix)enharmonic, and (mos-prefix)subchromatic). Specifying the step ratio is optional, and the names for step ratios can be abbreviated into a one or two-letter prefix. (Frostburn's abbreviations can be used here, too.) These prefixes are used for specific descendants, with the notable exception of soft and hard. For enharmonic mosses, these describe mosses with a step ratio outside the hyposoft and hypohard range. For subchromatic mosses, these describe mosses within the entire soft and hard ranges, producing terminology more specific than just subchromatic but not as specific as the specific step ratio ranges. These prefixes must include a hyphen.
Parent mos | Chromatic mosses | Enharmonic mosses | Subchromatic mosses | ||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Steps | L:s range | Steps | Prefix | Abbrev. | L:s range | Steps | Prefix | Abbrev. | L:s range | Steps | Broad prefixes | Specific prefixes | L:s range | ||
Prefix | Abbrev. | Prefix | Abbrev. | ||||||||||||
xL ys | 1:1 to 1:0 | (x+y)L xs | soft- | s- | 1:1 to 2:1 | (x+y)L (2x+y)s | soft- | s- | 1:1 to 3:2 | (x+y)L (3x+2y)s | soft- | s- | ultrasoft- | us- | 1:1 to 4:3 |
(3x+2y)L (x+y)s | parasoft- | ps- | 4:3 to 3:2 | ||||||||||||
(2x+y)L (x+y)s | hyposoft- | os- | 3:2 to 2:1 | (3x+2y)L (2x+y)s | quasisoft- | qs- | 3:2 to 5:3 | ||||||||
(2x+y)L (3x+2y)s | minisoft- | ms- | 5:3 to 2:1 | ||||||||||||
xL (x+y)s | hard- | h- | 2:1 to 1:0 | (2x+y)L xs | hypohard- | oh- | 2:1 to 3:1 | (2x+y)L (3x+y)s | hard- | h- | minihard- | mh- | 2:1 to 5:2 | ||
(3x+y)L (2x+y)s | quasihard- | qh- | 5:2 to 3:1 | ||||||||||||
xL (2x+y)s | hard- | h- | 3:1 to 1:0 | (3x+y)L xs | parahard- | ph- | 3:1 to 4:1 | ||||||||
xL (3x+y)s | ultrahard- | uh- | 4:1 to 1:0 |
Balzano (parent) | Chromatic balzano | Enharmonic balzano | Subchromatic balzano | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Steps | Name | Steps | Name | Steps | Name | Steps | Broad name | Specific name |
2L 7s | balzano | 9L 2s | s-balchromatic | 9L 11s | s-balenharmonic | 9L 20s | s-balsubchromatic | us-balsubchromatic |
20L 9s | ps-balsubchromatic | |||||||
11L 9s | os-balenharmonic | 20L 11s | qs-balsubchromatic | |||||
11L 20s | ms-balsubchromatic | |||||||
2L 9s | h-balchromatic | 11L 2s | oh-balenharmonic | 11L 13s | h-balsubchromatic | mh-balsubchromatic | ||
13L 11s | qh-balsubchromatic | |||||||
2L 11s | h-balenharmonic | 13L 2s | ph-balsubchromatic | |||||
2L 13s | uh-balsubchromatic |
Other mos names
This section describes additional names for groups of mosses or for mosses or that have more than 10 notes but are worthy of names.
Names for mos descendants with more than 5 periods
To name mos descendants with more than 5 periods, the names for wood mosses are extended to hexawood, heptawood (or septawood), octawood, nonawood (or enneawood), and decawood. (This is not too different from Frostburn's proposal.) Beyond that, the naming scheme becomes 11-wood, 12-wood, and so on, and mosses are referred to chromatic (number)-wood, enharmonic (number)-wood, and subchromatic (number)-wood. The term (number)-wood descendants is also used, and to refer to nth (number)-wood descendants, the algorithm is used below to find the number of generations:
- Let z and w be the number of large and small steps of the parent mos to be found. Assign to z and w the values x and y respectively. Let n = 0, where n is the number of generations away from zL ws.
- Let m1 be equal to max(z, w) and m2 be equal to min(z, w).
- Assign to z the value m2 and w the value m1-m2. Increment n by 1.
- If both z and w are equal to 1, then the parent mos is nL ns and is n generations from the mos descendant xL ys. If not, repeat the process starting at step 2.
Mos | Name | Prefix | Abbrev. |
---|---|---|---|
6L 6s | hexawood | hexwud- | hw |
7L 7s | septawood or heptawood | sepwud- or hepwud- | sw or hw |
8L 8s | octawood | octwud- | ow |
9L 9s | nonawood or enneawood | nonawud- or ennwud- | nw or enw |
10L 10s | decawood | dekwud- | dkw |
11L 11s | 11-wood | 11-wud- | 11wd |
12L 12s | 12-wood | 12-wud | 12wd |
etc... |
Names for mos linear families
A mos linear family is a family of related mosses of the form xL (nx + y)s. This family starts with the mos xL ys, where x < y and n = 0, and continue with mosses with the same number of large steps but a linearly growing quantity of small steps. An example of such a family is the mos sequence 5L 2s, 5L 7s, 5L 12s, 5L 17s, etc, where each successive mos has 5 more small steps than the last.
Mosses in a linear family are based on repeated applications of the replacement ruleset L->Ls and s->s on the initial mos, and reaching the nth member of a linear family requires the initial mos have a hard or pseudocollapsed step ratio. The child mos (x+y)L xs is the start of its own linear family, which relates back to the initial mos xL ys if the initial mos has a step ratio that is soft or pseudoequalized.
Names for these families describe a subset of a mos descendant family, and most mos families go by the name of (mos name) linear family or (mos-prefix)linear family.
Trivial families (names not based on "linear") | ||
---|---|---|
Mos | Name | Reasoning |
1L (n+1)s | monolarge family | Represents an entire family of mosses formerly unnamed by TAMNAMS
The name "monolarge" is chosen as it succinctly describes the only possible 1L family |
2L (2n+1)s | bilarge family | Named analogously to the monolarge family |
3L (3n+1)s | trilarge family | Named analogously to the monolarge family |
Families with 3 large steps | ||
Mos | Name | Reasoning |
3L (3n+2)s | apentilinear family | Named after anpentic |
Families with 4 large steps | ||
Mos | Name | Reasoning |
4L (4n+1)s | manulinear family | Named after manual |
4L (4n+3)s | smilinear family | Named after smitonic |
Families with 5 large steps | ||
Mos | Name | Reasoning |
5L (5n+1)s | mechlinear family | Named after machinoid (prefix mech-) |
5L (5n+2)s | p-linear family | Named after p-chromatic rather than diatonic, which has no prefix |
5L (5n+3)s | oneirolinear family | Named after oneirotonic |
5L (5n+4)s | chtonlinear family | Named after semiquartal (prefix chton-) |
Families with 6 large steps | ||
Mos | Name | Reasoning |
6L (6n+1)s | archeolinear family | Named after archeotonic |
6L (6n+5)s | xeimlinear family | Named after xeimtonic, a former name for 6L 5s |
Families with 7 large steps | ||
Mos | Name | Reasoning |
7L (7n+1)s | pinelinear family | Named after pine |
7L (7n+2)s | armlinear family | Named after superdiatonic (also called armotonic) |
7L (7n+3)s | dicolinear or zalinear family | Named after dicotonic (also called zaltertic) |
7L (7n+4)s | prasmilinear family | Named after a truncation of a former name for 7L 4s (suprasmitonic) |
7L (7n+5)s | m-linear family | Named after m-chromatic, a former name for 7L 5s, as it's the start of its own linear family |
7L (7n+6)s | ||
Families with 8 large steps | ||
Mos | Name | Reasoning |
8L (8n+1)s | blulinear family | Named after subneutralic (prefix blu-) |
8L (8n+3)s | ||
8L (8n+5)s | petrlinear family | Named after petroid, a former name for 8L 5s |
8L (8n+7)s | ||
Families with 9 large steps | ||
Mos | Name | Reasoning |
9L (9n+1)s | sinalinear family | Named after sinatonic |
9L (9n+2)s | ||
9L (9n+4)s | ||
9L (9n+5)s | ||
9L (9n+7)s | ||
9L (9n+8)s |
Reasoning for names
The overall motivation for these names is to give names to closely related mosses and refer to individual mosses as some member of a broader family, rather than name individual mosses.
The names for chromatic scales are based on former names for the child mosses of diatonic (5L 2s) - p-chromatic for 5L 7s and m-chromatic for 7L 5s - and was generalized to chromatic mos. The term enharmonic is already in use to describe the grandchild mosses of diatonic, and so was generalized to enharmonic mos. The term subchromatic is a term coined by Mike Battaglia to describe a scale that is more chromatic than either chromatic or enharmonic, and is generalized to subchromatic mos.
The format of adding a mos's prefix to the terms descendant, chromatic, enharmonic, and subchromatic is best applied to mosses that have no more than three periods. With mosses that descend directly from nL ns mosses especially (4L 4s and above), this is to keep names from being too cumbersome (eg, chromatic (number)-wood instead of (number)-woodchromatic).
Various people have suggested the use of p- and m- as prefixes to refer to specific chromatic mosses, as well as the use of f- and s- for enharmonic mosses. Generalizing the pattern to 3rd mos descendants shows the letters diverging from one another, notably where m- is no longer next to p- and f- and s- are no longer along the extremes. Rather than using these letters, as well as being temperament-agnostic, prefixes based on step ratios are used instead. However, temperament-based prefixes may be used specifically for diatonic descendants as alternatives to the prefixes based on step ratios.
Diatonic scale | Chromatic mosses | Enharmonic mosses | Subchromatic mosses | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Steps | Temp-based prefix | Prefix | Steps | Temp-based prefix | Prefix | Steps | Temp-based prefix | Prefix | |
5L 2s | 7L 5s | m- (from meantone) | s- | 7L 12s | f- (from flattone) | s- | 7L 19s | t- (from tridecimal) | us- |
19L 7s | f- (from flattone) | ps- | |||||||
12L 7s | m- (from meantone) | os- | 19L 12s | m- (from meanpop) | qs- | ||||
12L 19s | h- (from huygens) | ms- | |||||||
5L 7s | p- (from pythagorean) | h- | 12L 5s | p- (from pythagorean) | oh- | 12L 17s | p- (from pythagorean) | mh- | |
17L 12s | g- (from gentle) | qh- | |||||||
5L 12s | s- (from superpyth) | h- | 17L 5s | s- (from superpyth) | ph- | ||||
5L 17s | u- (from ultrapyth) | uh- |