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  2. Black Speech - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Speech

    Tolkien's attitude to the Black Speech is revealed in one of his letters. From a fan, Tolkien received a goblet with the Ring inscription on it in Black Speech. Because the Black Speech in general is an accursed language, and the Ring inscription in particular is a vile spell, Tolkien never drank out of the goblet, and used it only as an ...

  3. Sound and language in Middle-earth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sound_and_language_in...

    Further, Black Speech contains far more voiced plosives (/b, d, g/) than Elvish, making the sound of the language more violent. Podhorodecka concludes that Tolkien's constructed languages were certainly individual to him, but that their "linguistic patterns resulted from his keen sense of phonetic metaphor", so that the languages subtly ...

  4. Languages constructed by Tolkien - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Languages_constructed_by...

    The English philologist and author J. R. R. Tolkien created several constructed languages, mostly related to his fictional world of Middle-earth.Inventing languages, something that he called glossopoeia (paralleling his idea of mythopoeia or myth-making), was a lifelong occupation for Tolkien, starting in his teens.

  5. Elvish languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elvish_languages

    Old Norse, Tolkien [5] Used by elves and by the riders and other magic users to cast spells. It was the language of the now extinct Grey Folk. One cannot lie in the Ancient Language and one is bound by what one says in it. Ellylon and Hen Llinge (Elder Speech) Andrzej Sapkowski: The Witcher saga: Welsh, Irish, French and English [6] [7 ...

  6. Khuzdul - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khuzdul

    Tolkien states that Khuzdul was complicated and unlike the other languages of Middle-earth at the time in its phonology and grammar. It has been said the grammar of Khuzdul influenced the basic grammar of Adûnaic , but little material is given to show these influences other than the mention of where Adûnaic's grammar differs from Quenya .

  7. Lhammas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lhammas

    The Lhammas (/ˈɬɑmɑs/), Noldorin for "account of tongues", is a work of fictional sociolinguistics, written by J. R. R. Tolkien in 1937, and published in the 1987 The Lost Road and Other Writings, volume five of The History of Middle-earth series.

  8. Anthony Appleyard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthony_Appleyard

    Appleyard wrote about Tolkien's frame story character Aelfwine of England, with analysis of Tolkien's use of Old English. [8] Appleyard is recorded as observing that the word nazg ("ring") in the explicitly constructed language Black Speech – in the fiction, constructed by the Dark Lord Sauron, in reality by Tolkien – appeared to have been borrowed from the phrase chanana kad, meaning ...

  9. David Salo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Salo

    David Salo is an American linguist who worked on the languages of J. R. R. Tolkien for the Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit film trilogies, expanding the languages (particularly Sindarin) by building on vocabulary already known from published works, and defining some languages that previously had a very small published vocabulary.