A Gateway to Sindarin

A Gateway to Sindarin

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  • Author: David Salo
  • Publisher: University of Utah Press
  • ISBN: 0874808006
  • Category : Foreign Language Study
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 455

A serious linguistic analysis of Tolkien's Sindarin language. Includes the grammar, morphology, and history of the language.


A Gateway to Sindarin

A Gateway to Sindarin

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  • Author: David Salo
  • Publisher:
  • ISBN: 9780874809121
  • Category : Language Arts & Disciplines
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 0

A serious look at J. R. R. Tolkien's elvish tongue Sindarin, by means of its grammar, morphology, and history. Supplemental material includes a vocabulary, Sindarin names, and a glossary of terms.


A Fan's Guide to Neo-Sindarin

A Fan's Guide to Neo-Sindarin

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  • Author: Fiona Jallings
  • Publisher: Lulu.com
  • ISBN: 0997432160
  • Category :
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 362

Enchanted with Elvish? This is Neo-Sindarin, the language as it has flourished on the Internet using Tolkien's creation as a roadmap. This book functions as a friendly introduction to the Neo-Sindarin community. Included is the most current information available to fans. Within explore Neo-Sindarin academics, learn simple linguistic concepts, practice useful phrases while studying grammar, and look at the world through Elven eyes: from how they count on their fingers to how they organize the cosmos. Govano ven! (Join us!)


An Introduction to Elvish

An Introduction to Elvish

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  • Author: Nina Carson
  • Publisher: Brans Head Books
  • ISBN:
  • Category : (John Ronald Reuel)
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 344


The Languages of Tolkien's Middle-earth

The Languages of Tolkien's Middle-earth

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  • Author: Ruth S. Noel
  • Publisher: William Morrow Paperbacks
  • ISBN: 9780395291306
  • Category : Fiction
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 218

Presents a comprehensive pocket guide to the fourteen languages of Tolkien's Middle-Earth and contains a dictionary and English/Elvish glossary, rules of grammar and pronunciation, and how to write the Elvish alphabet.


English as she is spoke; or, a jest in sober earnest

English as she is spoke; or, a jest in sober earnest

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  • Author: JosĂ© da Fonseca
  • Publisher: DigiCat
  • ISBN:
  • Category : Fiction
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 41

English as she is spoke by Jose de Fonseca is a befuddled Portuguese-to-English dictionary which was intentionally published as a humorous guide. Excerpt: "A choice of familiar dialogues, clean of gallicisms, and despoiled phrases, it was missing yet to studious Portuguese and Brazilian Youth; and also to persons of others nations, that wish to know the Portuguese language. We sought all we may do, to correct that want, composing and devising the present little work in two parts."


Sindarin Dictionary

Sindarin Dictionary

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  • Author: J. M. Carpenter
  • Publisher:
  • ISBN: 9781291332162
  • Category : Education
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 168

This is a comprehensive resource of Sindarin, bringing together every attested word from a large number of sources into both Sindarin-English and English-Sindarin formats. This dictionary also includes well marked reconstructions.


Sindarin Lexicon

Sindarin Lexicon

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  • Author: Kenneth Chaij
  • Publisher:
  • ISBN: 9780905520186
  • Category : Fantasy fiction, English
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 60

A dictionary of J R R Tolkien's invented language Sindarin giving the English meanings. Also included are notes on the history of the language and how to write English in FĂ«anorean script


Tolkien and Sanskrit (second, Expanded Edition)

Tolkien and Sanskrit (second, Expanded Edition)

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  • Author: Mark T. Hooker
  • Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
  • ISBN: 9781540435484
  • Category : Middle Earth (Imaginary place)
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 262

This is "The Director''s Cut," as a cinematographically minded wag termed it. This study is based on the observation that Tolkien calqued the names of the Sapta Sindhavah (Seven Rivers) from the Rig Veda as the Seven Rivers of Ossiriand. In other words, Tolkien created seven Elvish river names that mean the same thing as the river names of the Sapta Sindhavah. Much has been said of Tolkien''s use of Welsh, Old English, Gothic, Icelandic, Russian, Greek, and Latin. Little, however, has been said about Tolkien''s use of Sanskrit (Refined Speech), the great-great-...grandfather of all the languages above. Sanskrit was spoken in the second millennium B.C. in the valley of the River Indus, the river that put the "Indo" in the name Proto-Indo-European, a linguistic term for the *reconstructed common ancestor of the European languages. All indications to the contrary (C&G ii, 461), there is little doubt about Tolkien''s knowledge of Sanskrit from the point of view of a linguist. It is de rigueur for any serious philologist interested in etymologies like Tolkien. Tolkien was on the Language side of the English School at Oxford, where he took Comparative Philology as a special subject for Honour Moderations. (G&G ii, 758) In a certain sense, Tolkien''s The Silmarillion can be considered a veiled member of the genre of Raj Literature. The names of The Silmarillion say that in the same way that the names in Tolkien''s poem "The Mewlips" are masks that hide the fact that it is a poem about World War I. As the present study shows, the names of The Silmarillion say that the locus of Tolkien''s "Mythology for England" (C&G ii, 244-248) is the India of the British Raj. A literary analysis of Tolkien''s place in Raj Literature is, however, much more speculative than the linguistic analysis that makes up the core of this study, which stands on solid philological ground. The literary analysis will, therefore, be left to another time and place. While the basis of Tolkien''s calque of the names of the Seven Rivers as Ossiriand is Vedic in concept, the superstructure that Tolkien builds upon this foundation is non-Vedic. Some elements of the superstructure are more readily attributable to historical sources, like the history of the India Campaign of Alexander the Great, and the history of the British Raj in India, both of which were a part of the school curriculum when Tolkien was growing up. While the analysis of some of the words | names in this study would not be believable in stand-alone articles, in the context of the coherent structure of words and names presented here, they are worthy of serious consideration. The discovery presented here has the potential to more clearly define the linguistic and philosophical cradle of Tolkien''s ''Mythology for England,'' which was always The Silmarillion, and never The Lord of the Rings. It is Proto-Indo-European in the same way that the English language stems from Proto-Indo-European. That does not, however, mean that there is no gap between Proto-Indo-European language and culture, and the language and culture of The Shire. The analysis that follows is not a rehash of the discredited ideas of The Shores of Middle-earth (1981). It is instead, a completely new, linguistic approach to Tolkien''s Silmarillion nomenclature. Also from this author: Tolkien Through Russian Eyes (Walking Tree Publishers, 2003), published simultaneously in Russian. "Frodo''s Batman," Tolkien Studies, No. 1 (2004) A Tolkienian Mathomium (Llyfrawr, 2006) The Hobbitonian Anthology (Llyfrawr, 2009) "Reading John Buchan in Search of Tolkien," Tolkien and the Study of His Sources, Jason Fisher (ed.). (McFarland, 2011) Tolkien and Welsh (Llyfrawr, 2012) The Tolkienaeum (Llyfrawr, 2014) Iter Tolkienensis (Llyfrawr, 2016)


The Return of the King

The Return of the King

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  • Author: John Ronald Reuel Tolkien
  • Publisher: HarperCollins
  • ISBN: 9780007488353
  • Category : Baggins, Frodo (Fictitious character)
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 464

The armies of the Dark Lord Sauron are massing as his evil shadow spreads ever wider. Men, Dwarves, Elves and Ents unite forces to do battle agains the Dark. Meanwhile, Frodo and Sam struggle further into Mordor in their heroic quest to destroy the One Ring.The devastating conclusion of J.R.R. Tolkien's classic tale of magic and adventure, begun in The Fellowship of the Ring and The Two Towers, features the definitive edition of the text and includes the Appendices and a revised Index in full.To celebrate the release of the first of Peter Jackson's two-part film adaptation of The Hobbit, THE HOBBIT: AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY, this third part of The Lord of the Rings is available for a limited time with an exclusive cover image from Peter Jackson's award-winning trilogy.