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  2. Quenya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quenya

    Quenya (pronounced [ˈkʷwɛɲja]) [T 1] is a constructed language, one of those devised by J. R. R. Tolkien for the Elves in his Middle-earth fiction.. Tolkien began devising the language around 1910, and restructured its grammar several times until it reached its final state.

  3. Bible translations into constructed languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bible_translations_into...

    Quenya is a fictional language devised by J. R. R. Tolkien. Various parts of the Bible have been translated into Neo-Quenya, an attempt at editing a unified Quenya from Tolkien's evolving and sometimes contradictory ideas about the language. Helge Fauskanger has translated the New Testament and is currently translating the Old Testament. [1]

  4. Tengwar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tengwar

    The Quenya consonant system has five places of articulation: labial, dental, palatal, velar, and glottal. The velars distinguish between plain and labialized (that is, articulated with rounded lips, or followed by a [w] sound). Each point of articulation, and the corresponding tengwa series, has a name in the classical Quenya mode.

  5. Elvish languages of Middle-earth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elvish_languages_of_Middle...

    Nelson Goering's analysis of Tolkien's claim that Sindarin is to Quenya as Welsh is to Latin [3] Elvish language Features Resemblances European language Quenya "snake", a name leuka, Makalaure: High language, "Elven-Latin" 1) "Used for ceremony, and for high matters of lore and song" 2) Spelling system is Latin-like Cultural parallels of Quenya ...

  6. Elvish languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elvish_languages

    Elvish: Gael Baudino: Strands series: Romance languages [9] Elvish: Warcraft universe: Superficially resembles Tolkien's Elvish: Darnassian, Nazja, and Thalassian [10] are considered the modern elvish tongues spoken by the modern Kaldorei, the Naga, and the highborne (respectively), while Elvish itself is an ancient tongue no longer used as a ...

  7. Sindarin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sindarin

    Quenya was the language of the Exiled High-Elves returning to Middle-earth. The Exiles , being relatively few in number, eventually adopted a form of Sindarin: a southern dialect (of which the purest and most archaic variety was used in Doriath ruled by Thingol).

  8. Namárië - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Namárië

    The first stanza of "Namárië", a Quenya poem written in Tengwar script "Namárië" (pronounced [na.ˈmaː.ri.ɛ]) is a poem by J. R. R. Tolkien written in one of his constructed languages, Quenya, and published in The Lord of the Rings. [T 1] It is subtitled "Galadriel's Lament in Lórien", which in Quenya is Altariello nainië Lóriendessë.

  9. 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 ...