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The song begins with humming and an arrangement of vocable singing which are overdubbed in reverse.
The former has been primarily used for its supposed assonance with "catina", the Latin feminization of the vocable catinus.
Currently (as of 2008), a similar movement is pushing for the acceptance of trall, or vocable singing, as a traditional instrument.
This suggests that early babbling arises from inherent human tendencies to use the vocable articulators in particular ways during early language acquisition.
These long and complex theme and variation tunes were traditionally transmitted orally by a combination of definite vocable syllables.
The raliavimai or warbles are also recitative type melodies, distinguished by the vocable ralio, which is meant to calm the animals.
Another early musical form was the vocable, a vocal composition of humming or 'nonsense' syllables, an early form of Scat.
FTP site: sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/apps/cai/ Learn is a vocable learning program with memory model.
The word "Marabá" derives from the indigenous vocable "Mayr-Abá", which simply means "son of the indigenous woman with a white man."
However, both types of songs contain the vocable valio - in the northern Highlands (Aukštaitija) as well as in Samogitia.
Le vocable "enquête" est un euphémisme, produit de la novlangue en vigueur sous Saddam Hussein.
It is assumed that different lineages of pipers developed distinct forms of Canntaireachd that were variations on a broadly similar system of sung vocable notation.
The Campbell Canntaireachd, written in 1797, is a two-volume manuscript with chanted vocable and phonetic transcriptions of pibroch music that predates the 19th-century attributions.
Nevertheless, Cambell's Nether Lorn Canntaireachd was adopted by the Piobaireachd Society in their publications and has become the most commonly used vocable system.
While his vocable system had its origins in chanted notation, the Campbell Canntaireachd is now considered to have been intended as a written documentation of the music, to be read rather than sung.
The predominant vocable system used today is the Nether Lorn canntaireachd sourced from the Campbell Canntaireachd manuscripts (1797 & 1814) and used in the subsequent Piobaireachd Society books.
According to Onfray, the term "athéologie" is taken from a project of a series of books written and compiled by Georges Bataille under the vocable La Somme athéologique, which was ultimately never completed.
Independent documentation of this tradition of oral transmission can be found in canntaireachd manuscripts, chanted vocable transcriptions of the music that predate the normative musical scores authorised by the Pìobaireachd Society and enforced through prescriptive competition judging criteria.