joshua@fluke.UUCP (J.B. LaRue) (07/08/84)
[I'm here...but you can't find me!!!] As per a prior request, I just happened to have saved the file from this news group. It was on the lang. of elvish. It seems to be quite explicit. Here it is...enjoy!!! ******************************************************************************* Path: fluke!ssc-vax!uw-beaver!tektronix!decvax!mcnc!akgua!clyde!burl!ulysses!allegra!princeton!tilt!smw From: smw@tilt.UUCP (Stewart Wiener) Newsgroups: net.sources Subject: Fictional languages: a guide to Elvish Date: Sun, 20-May-84 21:34:05 PDT Date-Received: Tue, 22-May-84 18:28:07 PDT Organization: Princeton Univ. EECS Lines: 760 The following, a response to my grammar of the Klingonese language, is a guide to Elvish. It was compiled by Robert M. Schroeck of Princeton University, reachable on Bitnet as rms@puccuts.BITNET (via your friendly Bitnet gateway, probably ucbvax/Berkeley). Pointers to this appeared in the net.sf-lovers and net.nlang groups. To those of you in ARPA-land receiving this under UNIX-SOURCES, oh well. That's what you get for receiving a Usenet newsgroup intended for anything too large for normal groups. Pass it on to those on the SF-LOVERS list. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Okay, you can do a lot more with Elvish than you can with klingonaase because Tolkien left a much larger vocabulary with which to work -- still, it's kind of small -- 600 words more or less. However, there's evidence that, like in German, you can hook small words together to make bigger words that represent other things. Most of what's in here is generalization from what is left of the tongues, but it seems to work well enough. First thing to remember is that there are two Elvish languages extant: Sindarin (Grey-elvish) and Quenya (High-elvish). They can be used in compound forms and structures, but it is sometimes confusing, not generally considered good usage, except in names and other nouns. Everything here will be labeled as to source language. ----------------------------------------------------------------- VERBS (Quenya) Present Past Future Imperative subjunctive root + a root + e root + uva root + e root + ai na = is ne = was nuva = will be ne! = be! nai = may it be sila = sile = siluva = will sile! = sulai = may it shines shone shine shine! shine The plural is formed by adding "r". When the subject is plural, the verb must be, also: lassi lantar = leaves fall To indicate the pronouns I, we, and thou as subjects, the following suffixes are added: -n for I, -(l)met for we, and -lye for thou. In the case of -met, the l may take the place of the plural r: lantalmet = we fall (Sindarin) Present Past Future Imperative Participial Auxiliary root + a root + ant root + ath root + o root + iel root + i na = is nant = was nath = will no! = be! niel = being ni = have be been edra = edrant = edrayh = edro! = edriel = edri = have open opened will open open! opening opened To indicate the pronoun I is the subject, a vowel and the letter n are added: root + on root + en root + ath + on root + in non = I nen = I nathon = I nin = I am was will be have been No other pronoun structures survive in either language. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- NOUNS Compound nouns are constructed by placing the descriptive element before the main element, unlike English. The concepts "of" and "of the" are expressed by word order: Dunadan "Man of the West" literally "west-man" Yavanna "Giver of Fruits" literally "fruit-gift" It is permissable to combine Quenya and Sindarin elements. Tolkien said "Boromir" was such a combination. Quenya plural is formed by adding "i" to words ending in one or more consonants, "r" to words ending in vowels: elen -> eleni, sinda -> sindar, las -> lassi, alda -> aldar. Possessive in Quenya is formed by dropping the final vowel, if there is one, and adding "o" for singular forms. For plurals, add -on, and do not drop the vowel. Varda -> Vardo "Varda's" Silmarilli -> Silmarillion "of the Silmarils". Prepositional elements come at the end of Quenya words, but the final vowel is not dropped: Oiolosse -> Oiolosseo "from Ever- white", Lorien -> Loriendesse "in Lorien". In Quenya, the dual element is formed by adding "t": maryat "hands-her-two", met "us two". Sindarin plurals are formed by changing the vowels, as shown below: adan = man, edain = men amon = hill, emyn = hills annon = gate, ennyn = gates barad = tower, beraid = towers mallorn = gold-tree, mellyrn = gold-trees orch = orc, yrch = orcs orod = mountain, ered = mountains Some of the rules covering these changes are: stressed a becomes e, unstressed a becomes ai, o becomes e, i, or y. Collective plurals are formed in Sindarin by adding -ath or, usually in the case of peoples, -rim, literally meaning "a host", "a great number": elenath "all the stars", Rohirrim "all the Masters of Horses". An augmentive suffix, -on, is added to Sindarin nouns to signify that the thing is very great or mighty, as in aearon "great sea". ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ARTICLES The only article in Elvish is the Quenya word "i", meaning "the". Indefinite articles in Quenya and all articles in Sin- darin are apparently implied by the structure of the sentence. There exists what appears to be a compound form similar to the French du and au; it is the word "mi", translated by Tolkien as "in the". It is assumed to be a combined form incorporating the pronoun i. ----------------------------------------------------------------------- SYNTAX Acceptable structures are: Quenya subject-verb-object object-verb-subject hisie untopa Calaciryo miri tier undulave lumbule mist covers Calacirya's jewels roads drowned (by) heavy shadow object-subject-verb maryat Elentari ortane . . . her two hands Star-Queen lifted up . . . Verbs occur at the end of sentences only in questions. Si man i yulma nin enquantuva? Now who the cup for me will refill? Sentences beginning with verbs tend to be emotionally charged: Auta i lome! Passing is the night! If there are one or more nouns before the verb, one of them will usually be the subject, unless it has a prepositional suffix (-o, -ello, -esse "from, "in"), in which case the subject is the noun following the verb. Yeni ve linte yuldar avanier. YEARS like swift draughts have passed away. vs. sindanoriello caita mornie i falmalinnar from grey country lies DARKNESS the waves upon Most adjectives precede the noun; adjectives of plural nouns must be plural. Adjectives are made plural by changing the final vowel to "e" or adding "e" if there is no final vowel. Two adjectives, or a possessive and an adjective, are never found in sequence, as in "the big blue ball" or "Joey's red truck". The structure would be "the big ball blue" or "Joey's truck red". Also, possessives are never placed between a preposition and its object: Vardo nu luini tellumar NOT nu Vardo luini tellumar Varda's under blue domes under Varda's blue domes These are only guidelines -- in a highly inflected language such as Quenya, a great amount of freedom in word order is allowed. Sindarin object-verb-subject verb-object le linnathon na vedui Dunadan (to) thee chant-I-will (it) is (at) last Dunadan (subject suffix) verb-subject subject-verb-object noro lim, Asfaloth! Naur dan i ngaurhoth! ride on, Asfaloth! Fire take the werewolves! Verbs are usually followed by their modifiers, which may even come at the end of a sentence: Cuio i Pherian annan! Live the Halflings long! Nouns are usually followed by their modifiers. The concepts "of" and "of the" are usually implied by word order. Where "from" or "of" is stated, the Sindarin word o stands alone, rather than as a suffix: o menel, Celebrimbor o Eregion from heaven, Celebrimbor of Eregion vs. Annon edhellen Door (of the) Elves -------------------------------------------------------------------------- English to Elvish Dictionary Q = Quenya, S = Sindarin. Verb roots are preceded by "to", as in "to abide". Accents are indicated by characters in the line above the word: / . yavie / = acute accent, = circumflex, and . = umlaut (two small dots over a vowel). A pronunciation key will be found at the end of the dictionary. A abhorrence : deloth abhorrent : Q saur, S thaur to abide : Q mar abominable : Q saur, S thaur abroad : S palan abyss : ia across : S thar, S thrad afar : S palan again : Q en- air : Q vilya, Q wilya alas : Q ai all (plural) : Q ilye / the all : Q iluve alone : er and : S a, Q ar anger : ruth as : Q ve ash : S lith / . augmentive suffix : S -on autumn : S iavas, Q yavie . awakening : Q coire, cuivie, S echoir, echui awe : gaya B bald : S rudh bane : dagnir barrow : S tur, plural tyrn battle : dagnir, ndak, dagor to be : Q,S n- be it that : Q nai beard : fan(g) beautiful (fair) : Q vana because (for) : Q an beech : neldor to behold : Q aiy-, el- to bend : lok beside : Q ar beside : Q ar between : S im, Q imbe beyond : Q pella . birch : S brethil bird (small) : S aew, Q aiwe black : mor, vorn blessed : aman, man blood : agar, S sereg, Q serke bloodstained : agarwaen / . . blossom : Q lote, S loth blue : S lhun, luin, Q luine / book : Q parma bow : cu, Q luva breeze : Q hwesta bridge : S iant, Q yanta . . brilliance : S ril, Q rilde, rille bull : mundo butterfly : Q wilwarin C cave : grod, groth, rod chambers : S sammath / champion : Q arato to chant : S lin- children : Q hini, S hin chill : S ring to cleave : cir-, kir-, ris- cleaver : crist, grist, kris, hyando cleft : cir, cirith cloak : Q collo, S gollo cloud : S fan, Q fana, plural fanyar coast : falas, falath collective plural suffix : S -ath, S -rim, Q rimbe course : rant cold : S ring / / to come : Q tul- commander : Q kano, S gon / consumer : Q vasa cool : him to cover : Q untup- crow : S craban, plural crebain to cry : Q, S nall- cup : Q yulma to cut : cir, kir D . dark : S dur, mor darkness : S fuin, Q huine, Q mornie daughter : Q,S -iel dauntless : S thalion / day : S -or, Q re dead : S firn . / . death : S gurth deep : Q bale, bule demon : S raug, rog, Q rauko devoted to : (n)dil, (n)dur, nil, nur dimness : S du, gwath, wath, weth direction : Q men dog (great) : huan dome : Q telluma, plural tellumar doom : S amarth, Q ambar, umbar door : S annon, pl. ennyn, fen, fennas double : adu down : Q ndu, nu to down-lick : Q undulav- to down-roof : Q untup- draught : Q yulda, plural yuldar to draw : S teith- dread : gaya, S gor, goroth to drown : Q undulav- / . / . dusk : S dome, Q lome, S moth Dwarf : S naug plural naugrim, nog, nogoth plural noegyth to well : Q mar- dwelling : S bar, Q mar E eagle : Q soron, S thoron ear : S lhaw Earth : Q Arda earth (dirt) : Q kemen / east : S rhun, run, Q rom, romen echo : lom echo (great) : lammoth Elf : S edhel plural edhil, S eledh, Q elda plural eldar, quendi empty : lost to encircle : Q pel- encircling wall : S echor end : met to end : Q tel- Ent : S Onod plural Onodrim or Enyd to enter : S minn- even thou : Q elye ever : Q oi, oio, S oiale, ui exalted : Q varda eye : hen F fading : S beleth, firith, Q quelle fair-haired : Q vana to fall : Q lant- fangs : S carach, carag, carak, carch, . Q caraxe, carca far : Q hae far and wide : Q, S palan / . far-seer: Q palantir pl. palantiri farewell : namarie fate : Q ambar, umbar, S amarth father : Q atar, S adar feast : mereth feather : Q quesse fell (adj., "fell beast") : aeg feminine name suffix : -iel fence : S iath fence (outer) : S ephel to fill : Q quant- to find : Q hir-, utuv- figure : Q fana to finish : Q tel- fire : Q nar, S naur first : Q minya / . fist : S paur, Q quare flame (leaping) : lach, lhach flame (red) : S ruin, Q runya flat-lands : S talath to flow away, to flow down : Q cel-, kel- / . flower : Q lote, lot, S loth flowing : sirith foam : rhos, ros, roth, ving, wing to follow : Q khil, hil foot : S dal, Q tal for (because) : Q an . ford : athrad, iach forest : S erin pl. eryn, taur, Q taure forsaken : egla fortress : ost friend : (n)dil, (n)dur, nil, nur, S mellon from : Q -ello, Q -o from on high : Q ndu / . fruit : Q yave G gape : faug gate : Q ando, S annon pl. ennyn, fen, fennas garlanded maiden : Q -riel to gaze : S dir-, Q tir- to gaze afar : S palantir gazing : S diriel gift : Q anna to give : S on- glass : S heled gleam : glin glittering : bril glittering white : silivren . gloom : S fuin, Q huine gloomy : dim glory : S aglar, Q alcar, alkar glorious : S aglareb, Q alcarin, alkarinque to go around : Q pel- to go away : Q cel-, kel- goblin : S glam pl. glamhoth, orch pl. yrch gold : S mal pl. mel, Q malta gold (color, light) S glor, lor, Q . . . laure golden : Q laurea, laurie golden-brown : S baran golden-red : cul good : man grade : Q tyelle pl. tyeller gravel : S brith gray : S mith, thin(d), Q sinda green : S calen, galen pl. gelin, Q lai growth : loa H hair : fin half : Q per, S pher hall with arched roof : rond, thrond hall : Q mard pl. mardi to halt : S dar- hammer : S dring / . hand : S bor, cam, cham, Q kamba, ma, maite, quare harbor, haven : S lonn, lond, Q londe head : dhol, dol hearing : S lhaw . heart : Q ore heat : Q ur heaven : Q, S menel heavy : blung / heir : S chil, red, Q hil pl. hildinyar helm : thol here : S si hidden : S dolen hiding : esgal / high : ar(a), arat, don, Q oro, tan, tar, tara hill : S amon pl. emyn hither : nev hollow (adj.) : S nov hollow (noun) : Q unque holly : ereg, reg holy : Q aina, aire home : S bar, Q mar hook : Q ampa hope : S estel horn : S dil, ras pl. rais, Q til horror : del, S gor, goroth horde : S hoth . horse : S roch, ro(h), Q rokko host : S hoth, rim, Q rimbe to be hot : Q ur hound : huan / hour : lumenn' howl : ngwaw hunt : faroth I I : S im ice : S khelek icy, ice-cold : Q helka in : Q -esse in the : Q mi in this place : Q sinome in which : Q yassen iron : S ang, Q anga of iron : S angren pl. engrin is : Q,S na island : tol it : Q -yes (pronoun suffix) J jaws : Q anca, carka, S carach, carag, carak . jewel : S mir, Q mire K to keep : S cheb- kindler : S thon / . king : S aran pl. erain or erein knowledge : S golodh, Q noldo, nole L lady : S hiril lair : torech lake : aelin, lin lamp : Q calma / . . / / . lament : Q denie, nainie land : S dor, (n)dor, nor, Q nore last : S vedui to be last : Q tel- laughter : lalaith lawn : S parth leaf : Q asea, las pl. lassi letter : Q tengwa pl. tengwar, S tiw to lie : Q cait- life : coi to lift up : Q ortan- light : Q cal, kal, S galad like : Q ve to live : S cui-, guin- to listen : S last- lofty : don, S tar, Q tara lonely : ereb long : an, and, anann look toward : S tir loop : lok / . lord : Q heru, S hir lore : Q nole lost : Q vanwa love : mel lover of : (n)dil, (n)dur, nil, nur M to make : S ech- maiden : ien, -wen maiden (garlanded) : -riel man : S adan pl. edain, Q atan pl. atani masculine name suffix : -ion mastery : tur may it be : Q nai me-for : Q nin meeting (of our) : omentielvo mesh : rem, rembe, rembre metal : Q tinco middle : en, ened mighty : beleg mind : Q ore / . mist : Q his, hisie, S hith month : Q asta pl. astar moon : Q isil, S ithil mortal : fir mound : cerin, corol, coron, S haudh, tur pl. tyrn mountain : S orod pl. ered mouth : Q anto N name : Q esse near : nev nectar : miruvor net : rim, rembe, rembre / new : vinya night : S du / / / . nightingale : S dulin, tinuviel, Q lomelinde, tindomerel noble : ar, ara, arat noise (din) : glam north : S for, forn, forod, Q formen / not : Q,S u- (negating prefix) now : Q si . number (great) : S rim, Q rimbe O . O! : S a! ocean : S aear, Q ear of : Q -ello, -eva, Q,S -o old : iar, iaur on this side of : S nef one : Q er to open : S edr- opression : S thang out : et, eth outflow : ethir outside : Q ar P pass : cirith to pass : Q aut-, van- / . people : Q nore, S waith petty : S nibin pillar : tarma pine : S thon place (in this) : Q sinome plain : lad, talath platform : talan pl. collective suffix : S -ath, -rim point : ae, S dil, Q til pool : aelin, lin power : S bal pl. bel, rod pl. rodyn, Q tur, val to praise : S egl-, Q lait- prince : ernil prison : S band, Q mando, mbando pursue : faroth Q / queen : S bereth, Q tari R radiance : Q alata, S galad rage : Q aha rain : Q ulma rainbow : ninniach ransom : danwedh re- (repetition prefix) : Q en- . red : S car, caran, Q carne to refill : Q enquant- refuser : avar region : Q arda, men, S arth / remembrace : -rin rest : Q este reversed : Q nuquerna to ride : S nor- ridges : S pinnath ring : Q cor . . river : S duin, duine, hir, Q,S sir, Q luine roads : Q tierr root : thrond royal : ar, ara, arat rune : Q certa pl certar, S certhas S cirth, S gerthas rushing : alag, alak, asca S sad : dim to day : S ped-, Q quen-, quet- . screen : esgal sea : S ae, aer, gaer, Q ear . . series : Q tema pl. temar serpent : Q hloke, loke, S lhug, lyg seven : S odo, Q otso shadow : S ath, dae, gwath, wath, weth shadows (heavy) : Q lumbule shadows cast by light : morchaint sharp : S maeg, Q maika to shine : Q cal-, kal-, S gal- to shine with white or silver light : Q sil-, S thil- ship : cair, cir, cirya, gir shipwright : S cirdan shore : falas, falath, rast, rest shuddering : girith sickly : engwa sign : Q tehta, S thiw / . silent : din silver : S celeb, Q telep, telpe silverlike : S celebrin, Q telperin to sing : Q,S lin- . singer : linde skill : curu sky : Q vilya, wilya to slant down : S penn- . . slender, slim : fim snake : Q hloke, loke, leuca, S lhug plural lyg snowy : lossen son of : Q,S -ion sorcery : morgul, S gul south : S har, harad, harn Q hyarmen . spark : S gil, Q tinwe to sparkle : S din-, Q,S tin-, Q it- / tint-, tintil- to sparkle like jewels : S mir to speak : S ped-, Q quen-, quet- spider : ungol spider web : Q ungwe . . . spirit : Q fea, sule, thule spindrift, spray : ros, rhos, ving, / . wing spring of water : Q et-kele, etele, S eithel . spring season : S ethuil, Q tuile stake : S ceber pl. cebir, gebir star : Q,S el, Q elen pl. eleni, S elen pl. elenath or elin, gil, il starhost : S giliath starlight : Q silme stars (of the) : elda pl. eldar, elena stem : Q telco stirring : Q coire, S echuir stone : S gon, gond, Q ondo stone (small) : sarn pl. serni to stray : raen-, ran- stream : hir, sir street : rath strong : S thalion sudden : bragol surfline : falas, falath sumer : S laer, Q laire sun : Q anar, S anor / . / . . sunlight : Q are, aze, S aur, S aure / . sunrise : Q romen, S run sunset : Q andune, S annun swan : S alph, Q alqua sweet : Q lissi swift : Q linte sword : S megil, Q macil swordsman : Q macar, S vagor T tall : Q halla the : Q i thee : Q le them : S hain these : S hin this : S hi thorn : ereg, reg thou : Q lye, S le (usually suffixes) (even) thou : Q elye thousand : mene . thread : S lain three : nelde throng : Q sanga to thee : S le tobacco : galenas tongue : Q lambe tower : S barad pl. beraid, Q,S minas torment : Q ngwalme, nwalme, ywalme torrent : S thor treasure : Q harma tree : Q alda pl. aldar, S galadh pl. galadhad, orn troll : S torog trumpet sound : rom twilight : aduial, minuial, tindome, uial, undome to twine : rig- to twinkle : Q tintil- / U un- : Q u- under : Q nu, nuin underground dwelling : S grod, groth, rod unto : Q tenn' unwilling : Q avar us two : Q met V valiant : astaldo valley : S dun, nan, nand, imlad, tum Q tumbo vaulted roof : rond veil : Q,S fana victor : Q dacil void : ia voice : S lammen, Q oma W wall : S ram, Q ramba to wander : raen-, ran- wanderer : randir to watch (over) : Q,S tir- water : nen waterfall : lanthir wave (crested) : Q falma way : S bad, Q pata . we two : Q met week : Q enquie pl. enquier . well of water : Q ehtele, S eithel werewolf : S gaur, ngaur / / west : S annun, dun, Q numen wet : med, nin white (dazzling) : S glos white : S nim, nimf, nimp, niph, Q ninque who : Q man whole : Q iluve . will (verb suffix) : Q -uva willow : Q tasare, S tathar, tathren / wind : S gwae, gwai, Q sul window : S henneth . / wing : Q rama pl. ramar winter : Q hrive, S hriw . wise, wisdom : S golodh pl. gelydh, Q noldo, nole without : Q ar wolf : draug . woods : S erin pl. eryn, taur, Q taure word : S beth, Q quetta to wreathe : rig- Wose : dru wright : S dan pl dain Y -y (adj. ending in English, i.e., "mist-Y") : Q -ime, S -ui year (solar) : loa year (long Elven) : Q yen pl. yeni ------------------------------------------------------------------------- PRONUNCIATION KEY The following pronunciation key is adapted from the Appendix of The Silmarillion, Appendix E of The Lord of The Rings, and Tolkien's updated notes from page 63 of The Road Goes Ever On. C always has the value of K, never of S. Celeb 'silver' is pronounced "keleb". CH always has the value of CH in the Scottish 'loch' or Ger- man 'buch', never that in the English 'church'. DH represents the voiced TH sound in 'the', not the unvoiced TH of 'thin'. If you are pronouncing it right, you should feel a vibration in your larynx when you place your hand against it. The voiced TH is found in such Elvish words as Maedhros, Caradhras, and Galadhrim. F represents the F in 'find' except at the ends of words, as in the English 'of', where it has a V sound. Note that the root nef- is spelled with a 'v' when used in the compound Nevrast 'Hither Shore'. G is always "hard" G, as in 'get' or 'gild'. 'Gildor' begins as does 'Gilbert'; 'Region' begins as does 'regulate'. H alone, uncombined with other consonants, has the value of H in 'house' and 'behold'. It has special values when com- bined as : CH, DH, LH, RH, TH, HW, and HY. In Quenya, HT has the value of CHT in the German 'acht'. This combination appears in 'Telumehtar'. I in Sindarin, when occuring at the beginning of a word and followed by another vowel, has the value of consonantal Y: thus Ioreth is pronounced "Yoreth". K is occasionally found in Elvish, and is the same as C. L has approximately the sound of L in 'let'. However, between E or I and a consonant, or after E or I at the end of a word, L was somewhat 'palatalized', that is, pronounced with the blade of the tongue, rather than the tip, against the hard palate, as in 'Eldar'. LH represents an unvoiced, palatalized L. In archaic Quenya, this was written HL. NG has the value of NG in 'finger' except at the beginning and end of words, where it has the value of NG in 'sing', as in the Sindarin ngauroth 'werewolves'. QU has the sound KW. PH has the sound of F in find. R is trilled in all positions. RH, or HR as it is written in Quenya, represents a voiceless R. S is always voiceless, as in 'so'. The sound Z as in 'is' and 'zoo' did not occur in Elvish. TH has the value of the voiceless TH in 'thin' TY has the value of the British 'tune', not the American "toon". It has some of the quality of CH, as heard in some English dialect pronunciations of 'tune' as "chune", and also in the phrase 'at you', as "atcha" in some American dialects. V has the value of the English V, not the German. W has the value of the English W, not the German. HW is a voice- less W, as in 'white' and 'whale'. Y in Quenya is used for the consonant sound of Y in 'you'. In Sindarin, Y represented the modified U in the French 'lune'. HY represents a sound similar to that in 'hew' and 'huge', as in Hyarmen. This sound is represented by the H in Quenya EHT and AHT. Consonants written twice are pronounced long. The M in Rammas Echor and Sammath Naur have the sound of M in 'roommate' rather than that in 'ramming'. A has the sound in 'father'. E has the sound in 'bed' and is pronounced as a separate syllable in the middle of words such as Merethrond 'Feast Hall' and at the / . . end of words such as lome 'dusk', where it is usually marked 'e'. I has the sound in 'sick'. O has the sound in 'hot', but "rounder" than in modern English, apparently with the mouth and lips held more open. / U has the sound in 'brute' even when long. Turin is pronounced 'Toorin', not 'Tyoorin'. / Long vowels were marked with an acute accent, e.g. a. These vowels were long in duration rather having a different sound: not as in 'ape' but as in 'apple'. However, in Quenya, long / / e and o are correctly pronounced with a 'tenser and closer' sound than the short vowels, apparently with the mouth and lips more closed. In Sindarin, stressed one-syllable words are marked with a circumflex accent, indicating a particularly / prolonged vowel, as in dun, contrasted with Dunadan. / AE and AI have the sound of 'eye'. Dunedain ends with a syllable pronounced 'dine'. EI has the sound in 'gray'. IE has the vowels sounded separately and run together as in 'Ni-enna'. It does not have the sound in 'piece'. OE and OI have the sound of the vowels in 'boy' and 'toy'. UI is pronounced as are the vowels in 'ruin', but run to- gether into one syllable. AU and AW have the sound in 'loud' and 'how'. Sauron begins with a syllable pronounced 'sour'. ER, IR, UR before a consonant, as in Cirdan, or at the end of a word, as in Ainur, shoud be pronounced as in English AIR, EER, OOR. EA and EO are not run together, but form separate syllables. STRESS. In two-syllable words, the stress or accent is on the first syllable. In longer words it occurs on the next to last syllable if that syllable contains a vowel followed by two or more consonants, a long vowel, or a dipthong (two vowels pronounced in one syllable, such as AI, EI). IsILdur and PelARgir are words of this type. If the next to the last syllable contains a short vowel followed by one or no consonants, the stress falls on the syllable before it, the third from the end. FEanor, ErESsea, and DENethor are words of this type. Digraphs, pairs of consonants that make a single sound, such as CH, DH, PH, SH and TH, are counted as one letter in determining stress, and are written with one letter in the Eldarin alphabets. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Si quenuvalye i lamber Eldareva!