Parma Eldalamberon 20

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Parma Eldalamberon 20
The Qenya Alphabet
Parma Eldalamberon 20.jpg
AuthorJ.R.R. Tolkien
EditorArden R. Smith
PublisherElvish Linguistic Fellowship
Released3 August 2012
FormatPaperback journal
Pages160

Parma Eldalamberon 20: The Qenya Alphabet is the twentieth issue of Parma Eldalamberon, a journal of linguistic studies of the Elvish languages and names in the works of J.R.R. Tolkien.

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Contents

  • Introduction
Texts and Commentary
(here are included 40 documents that contain specimens of tengwar-style Elvish, to which are assigned Q1 through Q40)
  • Group I:
    • Q1. Description of English Usage
    • Q2. Description of English Usage
  • Group II:
    • Q3. Letter to H.M. Margoliouth
    • Q4. Letter to Dr. Sturrock
    • Q5. "The Walrus and the Carpenter" Excerpt
    • Q6. "The Walrus and the Carpenter" Excerpts
    • Q7. Pater Noster, Our Father, and Draft Statute
    • Q8. Our Father, Hail Mary, Gloria in Excelsis Deo, and Credo
  • Group III:
    • Q9. John Andrew Narrative, Rhymes, and Diary Entry
  • Group IV:
    • Q10. Description of "Qenya Alphabet"
    • Q11. Description of "Qenya Alphabet" with "God Save the King," Beowulf, Our Father, and Gloria in Excelsis Deo Excerpts
    • Q12. Fragmentary Table and Doodles
    • Q13. Tolkien Family Names
    • Q14. "God Save the King" Excerpt
    • Q15. "God Save the King" Excerpt and Doodles
    • Q16. "God Save the King" and Our Father
    • Q17. Tolkien's Name and Address and Three Prayers
    • Q18. Te Deum Excerpt ("Formal style")
    • Q19. Te Deum Excerpt
    • Q20. Te Deum Excerpt
    • Q21. Gloria in Excelsis Deo Excerpt ("Large rounded")
    • Q22. Gloria in Excelsis Deo Excerpt ("Formal book-hand rounded")
    • Q23. Gloria in Excelsis Deo Excerpt ("Large pointed")
    • Q24. Gloria in Excelsis Deo Excerpt ("Pointed angular style")
    • Q25. Excerpts from the Mass
    • Q26. Otfrid Excerpt
    • Q27. Philosophical Thoughts
    • Q28. Letter to E.V. Gordon
    • Q29. Letter to C.S. Lewis ("Cursive Style") with "Tom Bombadil" Excerpt
    • Q30. "Tom Bombadil" Excerpt and Table Fragment
    • Q31. "Tom Bombadil" Excerpt
    • Q32. "Tom Bombadil" Excerpt
    • Q33. "Tom Bombadil" Excerpt and Political Observation
    • Q34. "Tom Bombadil" Excerpt
    • Q35. "Errantry"
    • Q36. "Errantry" Excerpt
    • Q37. "Errantry" Excerpt
    • Q38. Nursery Rhymes
    • Q39. "Examples ofVarious 'Elvish' Handwriting Styles" ("The Walrus and the Carpenter," nursery rhymes, etc.)
    • Q40. "The Walrus and the Carpenter," "God Save the King," and Te Deum Excerpts
  • List of Abbreviations

Description

"The Qenya Alphabet" is an edition of Tolkien's charts and notes from circa 1931 dealing with the earliest version of the script essentially of the conceptual type he would later call "Fëanorian Tengwar" and eventually include in The Lord of the Rings. This issue of Parma Eldalamberon contains 40 documents in which Tolkien's examples of the scripts are reproduced in facsimile.

The documents include different versions of a detailed explanation of the use of the script for representing English, both phonetically (as it was designed to be used) and also according to English spelling. These have charts of the theoretical values of the sounds represented by the letters, and various English words and texts written in the scripts.

There are also various specimen texts written by Tolkien in the "Qenya Alphabet". These exemplify some conceptual changes in the mode or assignment of phonetic values to particular letters. There is also a great variety of different styles of writing, ranging from formal "book-hand" to rapidly written cursive.

Most of these examples are in English, but there are also texts in Latin, Old English, and Old High German. Transcriptions of the examples and editorial commentary on the dating and historical background are provided.

External links


Parma Eldalamberon issues
Issue 1 · Issue 2 · Issue 3 · Issue 4 · Issue 5 · Issue 6 · Issue 7 · Issue 8 · Issue 9 · Issue 10 ·
Issue 11 · Issue 12 · Issue 13 · Issue 14 · Issue 15 · Issue 16 · Issue 17 · Issue 18 · Issue 19 · Issue 20 ·
Issue 21 · Issue 22