{"id":25487,"date":"2003-07-30T09:26:38","date_gmt":"2003-07-30T14:26:38","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.theonering.net\/torwp\/2003\/07\/30\/evlish-101-lesson-4-transcript\/"},"modified":"2003-07-30T09:26:38","modified_gmt":"2003-07-30T14:26:38","slug":"evlish-101-lesson-4-transcript","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.theonering.net\/torwp\/2003\/07\/30\/25487-evlish-101-lesson-4-transcript\/","title":{"rendered":"Evlish 101 Lesson 4 Transcript"},"content":{"rendered":"<p class=\"intro\">&lt;Gorlab&gt; Say Annatar, what time do you have?<br \/> &lt;jincey&gt; it is about that time<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; It&#8217;s time<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; Well then&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; Welcome to our fourth installment&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; of Elvish 101&#8230;<br \/> &lt;jincey&gt; : )<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; where we wil bee delving yet further into..<br \/> &lt;elen_sila_lumennomentilievo&gt; hello<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; (hello, hello)<br \/> &lt;elen_sila_lumennomentilievo&gt; where am i?<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; nouns<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; The mysteries of the Elvish Tongues&#8230;<br \/> &lt;elen_sila_lumennomentilievo&gt; cool<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; specifically Nouns&#8230;.<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; And for a short review&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; and\/or<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; and\/or some pronouns&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; We have been over spelling conventions&#8230;<br \/> &lt;elen_sila_lumennomentilievo&gt; um<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; We have covered pronunciation&#8230;.<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; and the Quenya case system<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; And now we are able to identify things via Nouns&#8230;.<br \/> &lt;athelas&gt; What if this is your first time in here?<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; take notes<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; and have gone over the main way to modify a Noun using case endings&#8230;<br \/> &lt;jincey&gt; we have the logs from previous lessons posted<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; If this is your first time here, sit back and enjoy&#8230;<br \/> &lt;athelas&gt; ok thanks<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; There are no life threatening tests here&#8230;<br \/> &lt;elen_sila_lumennomentilievo&gt; this is my first time in hwere<br \/> &lt;elen_sila_lumennomentilievo&gt; here<br \/> &lt;Guest1&gt; aww no life threatening?<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; just a little lenition and declension<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; So now, we continue with Nouns. <br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; In Quenya,<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; we learned that it is a language pieced together a bit like a jigsaw puzzle&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; take a stem, and add some endings<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; Tolkien, in his &#8220;Etymologies&#8221; (found in The Lost Road &#8211; Volume 5 of the History of Middle earth)<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; has created lists of stems and roots&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; these stems and roots&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; are our base words&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; to make new words and phrases<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; which are modified with the use of Affixes&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; whether it&#8217;s prefixes, infixes, or suffixes&#8230;.<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; These endings can be combined with these bases stems and roots&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; to create different meanings&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; Quenya can have long compund word structures&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; That may appear daunting&#8230;<br \/> &lt;jincey&gt; are thes lists user friendly?<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; but is really just a different way of organizing information&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; These lists can be diciphered,<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; but that will most likely be a lesson unto itself..<br \/> &lt;jincey&gt; ok<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; unless Annatar has anything to add?<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; Helge of Ardalambion fame has made using the charts easier <br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; with his indexes of the Etymologies&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; Also, the introduction of the Etymologies by Christopher Tolkien&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; &#8220;to&#8221; the Etymologies, rather<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; allows one to understand the basic format with which Tolkien was working&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; as for nouns and Quenya&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; These are a bit different when you approach Sindarin&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; Now I&#8217;d like to address the tricksy situation of Sindarin sound-change<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; In Quenya, as we discussed last week, you modify a noun by adding a beginning or ending<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; that&#8217;s the affix<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; In English, we tend to do this&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; by adding, say, an &#8220;s&#8221; for plurals&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; Car.<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; Cars.<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; In Sindarin, however, putting word in a new grammatical situation changes its pronunciation and spelling <br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; The plural, that is, changing the &#8220;number&#8221; a noun has is a good example of this <br \/> &lt;jincey&gt; how many endings are there?<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; In Quenya, one usually adds a suffix such as &#8220;i&#8221; to make word plural<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; gorlab?<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; In Quenya there are quite a few&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; But when one becomes used to what these affixes (beginnings, middles, and endings) represent&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; It is no different than having to &#8220;know&#8221; how you modify words in english&#8230;.<br \/> &lt;Aysel&gt; can you suggest some favorite books on Elvis and writing too.?<br \/> &lt;Aysel&gt; Elvish!<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; if you know the word and the case, you just use a noun chart to determine the plural ending<br \/> &lt;Aysel&gt; sorry.<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; So you modify the Sindarin Noun to make it plural by&#8230;..<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; MUTATION!<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; that&#8217;s right, mutation<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; (The best Elvish source material is by far on the web&#8230;)<br \/> &lt;Maeglin_Lomion&gt; So palantir (sing.) &#038; palantiri (pl.) is Quenya?<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; Yes!<br \/> &lt;Elessar_T&gt; www.ardalambion.com is a good page<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; essentially, it&#8217;s a case of changing the vowels, a mechanism called UMLAUT<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; &#8220;Umlaut&#8221;&#8230;a Germanic word meaning literally &#8220;sound change&#8221;<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; UMLAUT means you modify  the vowels a good example in English is goose-geese<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; or  man-men<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; We don&#8217;t say Gooses&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; We say Geese&#8230;.<br \/> &lt;Maeglin_Lomion&gt; Mellon &#8211;&gt; mellyn is Sindarin?<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; We have mutated the &#8220;oo&#8221; into &#8220;ee&#8221;<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; a good example in Sindarin is Adan (man)&#8211;Edain (men)<br \/> &lt;Catherine&gt; though Adan and Edain sound similer&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; Another good LOTR example would be Amon (hill) Emyn (hills)<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; Who knows a place name that uses Amon?<br \/> &lt;Maeglin_Lomion&gt; Amon Hen<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; Right<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; What about Emyn?<br \/> &lt;Catherine&gt; Emyn Muil?<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; Yes.<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; Exactly!<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; Would you like to know how it works?<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; Yes! Yes! Tell us!!!<br \/> &lt;Maeglin_Lomion&gt; Yes<br \/> &lt;Catherine&gt; sure<br \/> &lt;Guest1&gt; yup<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; The basic idea&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; is that there was once, in the common ancester language to Quenya and Sindarin,<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; (Common Eldarin)<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; the parctice of adding &#8220;I&#8221; tp the end of a word to make it plural,<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; as is still done in some of the cases in Quenya<br \/> &lt;Catherine&gt; L or I?<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; I, like &#8220;me&#8221;<br \/> &lt;Elessar_T&gt; I, or i if you prefer<br \/> &lt;Catherine&gt; ok, thanks<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; or &#8220;i&#8221;<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; that &#8220;i&#8221; is no longer there but we can hear its effects<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; the vowels change to &#8220;become more like i&#8221;<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; so A becomes AI, A becomes E, and O becomes Y<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; Gnerally, this effect is &#8220;stronger<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; sorry,<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; &#8220;Stronger&#8221;, in the final syllable, which is closer to the &#8220;ghost i&#8221;<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; Gorlab can direct you to a cool chart that lays all of that out, what was that URL?<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; So vowel changes in root nouns display the plural&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; There is a chart on a site known as &#8220;Mellonath Daeron&#8221;<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; that&#8217;s it!<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; And also some other Sindarin Mutation information on a site called &#8220;Gwaith-i-phedain&#8221;&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Aysel&gt; thank you so much!  enjoyed this.<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; we have a link to the site on frodocoita.com, and so does Ardalambion<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; both of which can be reached through Helge Fauskanger&#8217;s &#8220;Ardalambion&#8221; site links<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; I do not wish tp monopolize this dicussion with Sindaring sound-change, but it&#8217;s helpful to understand it if you&#8217;re trying to learn it<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; So the main difference in Quenya and Sindarin Noun structure&#8230;.<br \/> &lt;Maeglin_Lomion&gt; What is the meaning of the -ath suffixed to Mellon?<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; is affixation vs. umlaut, to be geeky about it<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; good question Maeglin<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; Is that Quenya organizes the information in discrete affixes, and meaningful sentences are put together like a jigsaw puzzle&#8230; <br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; that is the Sindarin &#8220;Class Plural&#8221;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; While Sindarin uses mutation, yes&#8230;but not only for Noun Plurals&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Maeglin_Lomion&gt; Collective?<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; yes<br \/> &lt;Maeglin_Lomion&gt; Thank you.<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; Consonants can mutate as well&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; for other parts of speech&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Catherine&gt; Just when I thought I had vowels down&#8230; lol<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; when one wants to refer to &#8220;all tree people&#8221; and not just a specific group to calss plural can be used<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; galadhrim<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; Haradrin<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; Pherrianath<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; periannath, haradrim, actually<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; (tree-people, souh-people, halfling-folk)<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; (er, south-people)<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; this is handy, when trying to devise an ordinary plural seems like a bit of a steep undertaking<br \/> &lt;Folken-sama&gt; Tolkien and trees?<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; The best analysis of theses changes is in the Ardalambion essay &#8220;Sindarin, the noble tongue&#8221;<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; Mellanath Daeron has the clearest chart laid out<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; Now, not all examples of Sindarin (or Quenya) are &#8220;attested&#8221;<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; That is, written by Tolkien i that form or uaage<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; Some of these systems of affixes and mutation have been carefully analyzed&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; discussed on the old Tolk-lang disscusion group&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; and some are simplified for easy , casual use<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; written about in the journals &#8220;Vinyar Tengwar&#8221; and &#8220;Parmaeldalamberon&#8221;<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; those are the serious ones<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; and ultimately derived into a pattern..<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; that makes the most sense&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; Those indeed, are the serious ones and new students should not be swayed by the seeming number of affixes or mutational forms&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; how about those Quenya pronouns, hih?<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; It IS possible to create simple, easy, and expressive sentences in both languages&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; Ah&#8230;to touch upon Quenya pronouns&#8230;.<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; In English, they appear as seperate words&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; &#8220;I&#8221;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; &#8220;You&#8221;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; &#8220;He&#8221;<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; me?<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; &#8220;She&#8221;<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; her?<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; &#8220;It&#8221;<br \/> &lt;jincey&gt; it<br \/> &lt;jincey&gt; them<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; &#8220;They&#8221;<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; its&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;.<br \/> &lt;Elessar_T&gt; but in quenya&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; get on with it<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; But in Quenya&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Elessar_T&gt; they&#8217;re suffixes<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; they appaer as suffixes..<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; Latin, spanish Russian and other speakers should be familiar with this scheme<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; &#8220;-nye&#8221; is &#8220;You&#8221;, although it can be shortened to &#8220;n&#8221;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; and words that already end in &#8220;n&#8221;&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; absorb the &#8220;n&#8221; into itself.<br \/> &lt;Elessar_T&gt; Gorlab, sorry to correct you, but &#8220;-nye&#8221;\/&#8221;-n&#8221; means &#8220;I&#8221;<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; yes, 2nd person uses lye<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; pardon me, yes&#8230;.<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; 1st sigular uses nye<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; the principle being that you just tack it on the end of the noun-stem as a suffix<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; &#8220;he&#8221; in English is &#8220;-ro&#8221; in Quenya<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; verb-stem, rather,<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; &#8220;she&#8221; is &#8220;-re&#8221; <br \/> &lt;Maeglin_Lomion&gt; What is absorbing the &#8220;n&#8221; into itself&#8230;does that mean the word is spelled the same whether it&#8217;s singular or plural? (Sorry to backtrack)<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; and &#8220;they&#8221; are &#8220;-nte&#8221;<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; yes, it sinks almost without a trace<br \/> &lt;Maeglin_Lomion&gt; Thanks.<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; It avoids double &#8220;n&#8221;<br \/> &lt;Catherine&gt; I thought -s was for he\/she\/it<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; &#8220;-s&#8221; is for &#8220;it&#8221;<br \/> &lt;jincey&gt; could you please type out the examples?<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; Sure,&#8230;<br \/> &lt;Catherine&gt; Ah, I see. thank you<br \/> &lt;jincey&gt; hoe this appears?<br \/> &lt;jincey&gt; how<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; &#8220;na&#8221;, is Present tense Verb &#8220;to be&#8221;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; when we add the suffix &#8220;n&#8221;, (English &#8220;I&#8221;)&#8230;.<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; we get the word &#8220;nan&#8221;<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; to quote from Helge, Example: lend&euml; &#8220;went&#8221;, lenden or lendeny&euml; &#8220;I went&#8221;, <br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; Which means &#8220;I am&#8221;<br \/> &lt;jincey&gt; thanks : )<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; Bringing us dangerously close to the domain of &#8220;The Verb&#8221;<br \/> &lt;Elessar_T&gt; or to quote Namari&euml;: &#8220;hiruvalye&#8221; = &#8220;thou shall find&#8221;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; if we use this formula for the other pronouns using &#8220;na&#8221;, (English &#8220;is&#8221;)<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; We get:<br \/> &lt;Elessar_T&gt; no, that verb is to unknown<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; &#8220;nalye&#8221; which is &#8220;thou art&#8221;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; &#8220;naro&#8221; which is &#8220;he is&#8221;<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; &#8220;nare&#8221; which is &#8220;she is&#8221;<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; I didn&#8217;t unknow that \ud83d\ude09<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; &#8220;nas&#8221; which is &#8220;it is&#8221;<br \/> &lt;Elessar_T&gt; but in english, present tense of to be has 3 forms<br \/> &lt;Elessar_T&gt; we can&#8217;t be sure wether Tolkien intended this to be the case in Quenya  as well<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; But for these purposes we&#8217;re try to beliwve it is the case<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; so as to build a speakable construct<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; I believe that about wraps it up&#8230;if anyone has any questions feel free to e-mail me at Zorniod@hotmail.com<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; however, it is not , as you observed, attested<br \/> &lt;jincey&gt; thanks gorlab and annatar : ))<br \/> &lt;Gorlab&gt; Thankyou so much for coming and showing interest &#8211; you people are truly wonderful!!<br \/> Gorlab [jirc@adsl-158-77-165.asm.bellsouth.net] has quit IRC (Quit: Leaving)<br \/> &lt;jincey&gt; what is next week?<br \/> &lt;Maeglin_Lomion&gt; Thank you and Annatar for being here for us.<br \/> &lt;Guest1&gt; yeah thanks<br \/> &lt;Elessar_T&gt; ok, this was interesting&#8230; but I better go to bed now<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; right now, we&#8217;re trying to get to &#8220;the Verb&#8221; so we can start making some Quenya sentences<br \/> &lt;jincey&gt; ok : )<br \/> &lt;Lastar&gt; kewl<br \/> &lt;Elessar_T&gt; Mara lome<br \/> &lt;Maeglin_Lomion&gt; Nam&aacute;ri&euml;<br \/> &lt;Annatar&gt; Namarie<br \/> &lt;jincey&gt; namarie : )<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>&lt;Gorlab&gt; Say Annatar, what time do you have? &lt;jincey&gt; it is about that time &lt;Annatar&gt; It&#8217;s time &lt;Gorlab&gt;&#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":14,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"inline_featured_image":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_access":"","_jetpack_dont_email_post_to_subs":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_tier_id":0,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paywalled_content":false,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":"","jetpack_publicize_message":"","jetpack_publicize_feature_enabled":true,"jetpack_social_post_already_shared":false,"jetpack_social_options":{"image_generator_settings":{"template":"highway","default_image_id":0,"font":"","enabled":false},"version":2},"jetpack_post_was_ever_published":false},"categories":[138],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-25487","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-old-special-reports"],"aioseo_notices":[],"jetpack_publicize_connections":[],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"","jetpack_shortlink":"https:\/\/wp.me\/p1tLoH-6D5","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.theonering.net\/torwp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/25487","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.theonering.net\/torwp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.theonering.net\/torwp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.theonering.net\/torwp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/14"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.theonering.net\/torwp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=25487"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.theonering.net\/torwp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/25487\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.theonering.net\/torwp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=25487"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.theonering.net\/torwp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=25487"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.theonering.net\/torwp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=25487"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}