Elvish

From Tolkien Gateway

Elvish is a word that refers to any of the languages of the Elves, or all of them collectively. All of the Elven languages descend from the Primitive Quendian.

Major splits and variations were a result of the Great March of the Elves and the other migrations of the following millennia.

The Elves made use of the Tengwar and Cirth scripts for their languages.

Pronunciation

Tolkien used the Roman alphabet to write the names and words of Elvish origin in his works. Sindarin and Quenya have in most aspects very much the same rules in this pronunciation. Tolkien used the Roman letters having in mind "neutral" values, close to their original Latin ones: open, consistent and straightforward pronunciation, without glides.

The following table gives pronunciation for each letter or cluster in international phonetic script and examples:

Vowels

Letter / Digraph Pronunciation IPA Further comment
a as in father, just short [ɑ] never as in cat
á as in father [ɑː] /
â (in Sindarin) as in father, but even longer [ɑːː] /
ae (in Sindarin) the vowels described for a and e in one syllable. [ɑɛ̯] Similar to ai
ai a diphthong, similar to that in eye, but with short vowels [ɑɪ̯] never as in rain
au a and u run together in one syllable. Similar to the sound in house [ɑʊ̯] never as in sauce
aw (in Sindarin) a common way to write au at the end of the word [ɑʊ̯] /
e as in pet [ɛ] /
é the same vowel lengthened (and in Quenya more closed; as in German) S: [ɛː], Q: [eː] Rural Hobbit pronunciation allows the sound as in English rain
ê (in Sindarin) the vowel of pet especially lengthened [ɛːː] Rural Hobbit pronunciation allows the sound as in English rain
ei as in eight [ɛɪ̯] never as in either (in neither pronunciation)
eu (in Quenya) e and u run together in one syllable [ɛʊ̯] never as in English or German
i as in machine, but short [i] not opened as in fit
í as in machine [iː] /
î (in Sindarin) as in machine, but especially lengthened [iːː] /
iu (in Quenya) i and u run together in one syllable [iʊ̯] later by men often as in English you
o open as in British got [ɔ] /
ó the same vowel lengthened (and in Quenya more closed; as in German) S: [ɔː], Q: [oː] Rural Hobbit pronunciation allows the sound of "long" English cold
ô (in Sindarin) the same vowel especially lengthened [ɔːː] Rural Hobbit pronunciation allows the sound of "long" English cold
oi (in Quenya) as in English coin [ɔɪ̯] /
oe (in Sindarin) the vowels described for o and e in one syllable. [ɔɛ̯] Similar to oi. Cf. œ!
œ (in Sindarin) as in German Götter [œ] in published writing often oe has falsely been used, as in Nírnaeth Arnoediad!
u as in cool, but shorter [u] not opened as in book
ú as in cool [uː] /
û (in Sindarin) the same vowel as above, but especially lengthened [uːː] /
y (in Sindarin) as in French lune or German süß, but short [y] not found in English
ý (in Sindarin) as in French lune or German süß [yː] /
ŷ (in Sindarin) as in French lune or German süß, but even longer [yːː] not found in English

Consonants (differing from English)

  • The letter c is always pronounced like the letter k, even before i and e.; for instance, Celeborn is pronounced Keleborn, and Cirth is pronounced Kirth.
  • The letter g is never pronounced in the soft form, as in giant. For instance, Region is pronounced unlike the English word region.
  • The letter r is lightly trilled, as in Spanish.
  • The digraph dh, as in Caradhras, is pronounced like the th in this.
  • The digraph ch, as in Orch, is pronounced as in German ach.

It's important to remember that, while most samples of the Elvish language are written with the Latin alphabet, within the fiction the languages were written using Tengwar, or occasionally carved in Cirth. Tengwar can however be used to write many other languages.

See also: Languages of Middle-earth

Other versions of the legendarium

Tolkien envisioned many versions during the process of writing, even that Elves were taught speech by Oromë. In the Lhammas, Tolkien provides this relationship

Other Elvish languages

Since Tolkien, others have invented Elvish languages in their own fiction.

  • Darnassian and Thalassian, the languages of the Elves in the Warcraft universe.
  • Ssamath, the language of the Dark Elves or Drow of Dungeons & Dragons settings
  • Common Elvish, the language of the surface Elves of D&D
  • Eltharin, the language of the elves of Warhammer
    • Fan-Eltharin, the language of the Wood Elves
    • Tar-Eltharin, the language of the Sea Elves and High Elves
    • Drukh-Eltharin, the language of the Dark Elves
  • Elvish language of Andrzej Sapkowski's Hexer saga, based on Welsh and English
  • The Ancient Language The language of the elves in Eragon, also spoken by the riders.

Inspiration

J. R. R. Tolkien created many languages for the Elves to compliment his books set in the fictional universe of Middle-earth. His interest was primarily philological, and he said his stories grew out of his languages. Indeed, the languages were the first thing Tolkien ever created for his mythos, starting with "Qenya", the first primitive form of elvish. This is now one of the two most complete - Quenya (High-elven) and Sindarin (Grey-elven). In addition to these two he also created several other (partially derived) languages.

External links