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  2. Elvish languages of Middle-earth - Wikipedia

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

    Elvish and Indo-European language [7] trees compared. Tolkien, a philologist, was intensely interested in the evolution of language families, and modelled his fictional languages and their evolution on real ones. [2] The language names and evolution shown for Middle-earth are as used in the 1937 Lhammas. [6]

  3. Elvish languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elvish_languages

    Tolkien conceived a family tree of Elvish languages, all descending from a common ancestor called Primitive Quendian.He worked extensively on how the languages diverged from Primitive Quendian over time, in phonology and grammar, in imitation of the development of real language families. [3]

  4. Languages constructed by Tolkien - Wikipedia

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

    Beneath the name of each language is the word for "Elves" in that language. Internally, in the fiction, the Elvish language family is a group of languages related by descent from a common ancestor, called the proto-language. [10] Externally, in Tolkien's life, he constructed the family from around 1910, working on it up to his death in 1973.

  5. Sindarin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sindarin

    "Sindarin (Grey-elven) is properly the name of the languages of the Elvish inhabitants of Beleriand, the later almost drowned land west of the Blue Mountains. Quenya was the language of the Exiled High-Elves returning to Middle-earth.

  6. Quenya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quenya

    The Elvish languages are a family of several related languages and dialects. The following is a brief overview of the fictional internal history of late Quenya as conceived by Tolkien. Tolkien imagined an Elvish society with a vernacular language for every-day use, Tarquesta, and a more educated language for use in ceremonies and lore ...

  7. List of constructed languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_constructed_languages

    an Elvish language, largely inspired by Welsh. Quenya: qya: an Elvish language, largely inspired by Finnish, Latin, and Ancient Greek. Khuzdul: a Dwarvish language, largely inspired by the Semitic languages.

  8. Black Speech - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Speech

    M. G. Meile, labelling the Black Speech as "Sauron's Newspeak" by analogy with George Orwell's dystopian language, noted that it was "doubly artificial": where the Elvish languages were Tolkien's invention, the Black Speech was also a constructed language in his invented Middle-earth, since it had been created by the Dark Lord Sauron as an ...

  9. Celtic influences on Tolkien - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celtic_influences_on_Tolkien

    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 and Latin: ancient language, now in learned use Latin "fountain", "state" fontana, civitat: Sindarin