Modus
Mode ( Latin for " kind", " take", plural: modes) may refer to:
Music:
- The church modes, the tonal classification system of Western music from the Middle Ages to modern times
- In European music of the 12th and 13th century six rhythmically defined schemes of long and short notes as the basis of a modalrhythmischen composition, see Modalnotation
- Jazz in a modal scale, which can also be non-European origin, see Modal Jazz
- In the twelve-tone ( twelve-tone ) generic term for the twelve-tone row and its inversion, their cancer and cancer of the reversal, see twelve-tone technique
- In the music of Olivier Messiaen the modes of limited transposition options
- In ethnomusicology rhythmic formulas
- Scales, such as Slendro and pelog of Indonesian music
- Tonweisen or melody models, such as the maqamat in classical Arabic and maqamlar in classical Turkish music (see Maqam ( music) ) or the Indian Raga
Language:
- Mode (grammar ), a grammatical Konjugationsparameter of the verb
- A term used in narrative theory, introduced by Gérard Genette
Logic:
- In formal logic, the name of certain rules of inference, see syllogism
- Modus ponens
- Modus tollens
- Mode ponendo tollens
- Mode tollendo ponens
- Barbara mode
Other:
- Mode (statistics), in mathematics the most frequent value of a frequency distribution
- A mode of operation in science and technology
- A setting of a task in the computer science
- Mode, in jurisprudence a Legal Erwerbungsart
- Tournament format, the detailed manner of a sporting competition
- Modus Operandi, is used in forensics to describe the behaviors that a particular style, pattern or characteristics of a criminal
- Mode - cars, passenger coaches of Deutsche Bahn
- Renault Modus, a car model
- Game mode (computer game ), a variant of the game in computer games
The abbreviation stands for MODE:
See also:
- Wiktionary: Mode - Meaning meanings, word origin, synonyms, translations
- Modal
- Modes
- Fashion (disambiguation)
- Disambiguation
- Abbreviation