XPost: alt.usage.english
From: HenHanna@devnull.tb
On 1/4/2024 11:49 AM, Antonio Marques wrote:
> Ross Clark wrote:
>> January 3 is thus Tolkien Day, according to the Tolkien Society.
>>
>> He was a genuine scholar of Old English, which he professed in Oxford.
>> "Glossopoeia" (his term for making up languages) was apparently a
>> life-long hobby, not just a by-product of writing his very popular books.
>
> Reading the 12 volumes of ‘The History of Middle Earth’, one can see how
he
> spent significantly more time and ink and concern exploring the
> plausibility of a given suffix than the origin and basic biology of entire
> races.
>
>>
>> I have read very little Tolkien, and only watched the movies when they
>> came on TV. I found the endless battle scenes impressive but boring.
>>
>> Anyway, here's a specimen that Crystal gives, said to be in some variety
>> of Elvish:
>>
>> Ai! laurië lantar lassi súrinen
>> (Ah! like gold fall the leaves in the wind)
>>
>> Yéni únótimë ve rámar aldaron!
>> (long years numberless as the wings of trees!)
>
> The ë and acutes and to an extent the voiceless intervocalic stop identify
> it as a (variety of) Quenya, the one that resembles finnish. Sharper
> readers may know which. I think Vanyarin had th for ss, so it would be
> Noldorin, but maybe it’s the other way around.
>
>
>
the Elvish languages (Quenya and Sindarin) and the Khuzdul language of
the Dwarves.
the 1st movie was good...
i thought the lead actor (V. Mortensen) was weak.
but he was great in [A History of Violence]
>>> Viggo Peter Mortensen Jr. is an American actor,
musician, and filmmaker. He is the recipient of various accolades,
including nominations for three Academy Awards for Best Actor, three
BAFTA Awards, four Golden Globe Awards, and an Independent Spirit Award.
----------- i thought he was from N.Z.
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
* Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)
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