{"id":25539,"date":"2003-07-08T21:10:53","date_gmt":"2003-07-09T02:10:53","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.theonering.net\/torwp\/2003\/07\/08\/elvish-101-lesson-2-transcript-3\/"},"modified":"2003-07-08T21:10:53","modified_gmt":"2003-07-09T02:10:53","slug":"elvish-101-lesson-2-transcript-3","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.theonering.net\/torwp\/2003\/07\/08\/25539-elvish-101-lesson-2-transcript-3\/","title":{"rendered":"Elvish 101 Lesson 2 Transcript"},"content":{"rendered":"<p class=\"intro\">[Annatar] hello, we&#8217;re trying to connect a 2nd machine right now, this is paul, Kris will also be here, but not jeff<br \/>[Gorlab] This is Kris again, and I am now Balrog backwards&#8230;<br \/>[Gorlab] Today&#8217;s lesson is full of perilous phonology, dangerous diphthongs, and phunny phrases&#8230;.stay tuned&#8230;<br \/>[Gorlab] 8 O&#8217;clock&#8230;.<br \/>[Gorlab] The ring of power is no trifle&#8230;&#8230;or truffle&#8230;now the ring of Truffle is VERY tasty&#8230;<br \/>[jincey] mmmmm truffles<br \/>[Gorlab] Gandalf is no ordinary wizard, but part of a special group of powers&#8230;..like Silent Bob has in Mallrats&#8230;.<br \/>[Annatar] elen sila lumenn&#8217; omentielvo<br \/>[[Gorlab] Elen Sila Lumenn Omentielvo fellow Elvish language lovers!<br \/>[Gorlab] Today&#8217;s lesson oh fair people, shall cover some of the most basic principles of Elvish, which are instrumental in speaking both Quenya and Sindarin&#8230;<br \/>[Gorlab] Elvish has a common source.<br \/>[Gorlab] It is known as Primitive Elvish (or Primitive Quendian if you like)<br \/>[Annatar] fortunately, the Professor (tolkien) used essentially the same rules for &#8220;spelling&#8221; or transliterating both Sindarin and Quenya<br \/>[Gorlab] Exactly &#8211; owing to their common source&#8230;<br \/>[Gorlab] the first idea is that of the letter &#8220;c&#8221;<br \/>[Gorlab] Lots of early Elvish used the letter &#8220;K&#8221;<br \/>[Annatar] Presumably, they were both written in Tenwar in the &#8220;source documents&#8221; but in differing modes, however, when written in Roman alphabet, the same rules apply<br \/>[Gorlab] But the Professor wanted to make Quenya seem a lot more Latinized&#8230;<br \/>[Gorlab] so he adopted &#8220;c&#8221;<br \/>[Annatar] Tolkien decided that K was &#8220;uncouth&#8221; <br \/>[Gorlab] &#8220;c&#8221; is ALWAYS pronounced like &#8220;k&#8221;<br \/>[Annatar] unless combines with H<br \/>[Annatar] in which case youget the ch of German &#8220;ich&#8221;<br \/>[Gorlab] so, for instance Celeborn (husband of Galadriel) is pronouced &#8220;Keleborn&#8221;, never &#8220;Seleborn&#8221;<br \/>[Gorlab] Next is &#8220;qu&#8221;. &#8220;Qu&#8221; is the preffered spelling, never &#8220;q&#8221; by itself<br \/>[Demcoffee] it took me ages to catch onto the pronunciation sublties in the names<br \/>[Gorlab] Only Tolkien&#8217;s earliest languages used &#8220;q&#8221; by itself.<br \/>[Gorlab] Next is &#8220;X&#8221; instead of &#8220;ks&#8221; as in &#8220;Helcaraxe&#8221;<br \/>[Annatar] However, it is not the Q of &#8220;iraq&#8221; but pronounced qu<br \/>[Gorlab] next is &#8220;N&#8221;<br \/>[Maeglin_Lomion] Pronunciation question: &#8220;Fingolfin&#8221;&#8230;is it Fing(ng as in sing) -ol-fin, or Fin-gol-fin?<br \/>[Elaran] is not gandalf from the mannish tongues?<br \/>[Gorlab] Gandalf is actually an old Norse word from the icelandic eddas&#8230;<br \/>[Elaran] indeed, just curious<br \/>[Gorlab] I believe he was a dwarf in that story&#8230;<br \/>[Annatar] I believe that it&#8217;s fin-GOL-fin<br \/>[Maeglin_Lomion] Thank you<br \/>[Ks] question ? <br \/>[Gorlab] Yes?<br \/>[Ks] i live in israel.. does the elvish dudes got the het letter?<br \/>[Ks] i mean<br \/>[Ks] can they say<br \/>[Ks] het<br \/>[Ks] &ccedil;<br \/>[Ks] cant say it<br \/>[Annatar] pronouced?<br \/>[Ks] in english<br \/>[Ks] u dont use that sound<br \/>[Ks] AT ALL<br \/>[Ks] so its hard to pronounce<br \/>[Annatar] arabic?<br \/>[Ks] hebrew<br \/>[Gorlab] you are reffering to the semitic\/arabic idea of the sound in the back of the throat?<br \/>[Annatar] no, do they use it in arabic?<br \/>[Ks] yes they use it in arabic 2<br \/>[Gorlab] as in chutzpah?<br \/>[Ks] ken<br \/>[Ks] yes<br \/>[Gorlab] Not exactly&#8230;<br \/>[Ks] yes<br \/>[Ks] the first letter<br \/>[Annatar] what context?<br \/>[Ks] the first sound<br \/>[Ks] of chutzpah<br \/>[Ks] chu<br \/>[Annatar] that is the ch of evlish approximately<br \/>[Ks] okay<br \/>[Gorlab] Elves DO pronounce &#8220;hy&#8221; as an &#8220;ich-laut&#8221; and &#8220;ht&#8221; as an &#8220;ach-laut&#8221;<br \/>[Mo] is it kind of like a spitting sound in the back of your throat Ks?<br \/>[Gorlab] It&#8217;s more of a germanic idea than the hebrew sound&#8230;<br \/>[Annatar] ich is unvoiced, ach is voiced<br \/>[Gorlab] The Elvish is a similar sound, but more in the front of the mouth&#8230;<br \/>[Annatar] let&#8217;s talk about my fave &#8212; &#8220;dh&#8221;<br \/>[Annatar] TH in English is pronouced 2 ways<br \/>[Gorlab] Ah! DH&#8230;found all over Sindarin&#8230;<br \/>[Annatar] in Elvish TH is voiceless &#8220;&#8221;thing&#8221;<br \/>[Annatar] DH is voiced &#8220;them&#8221;<br \/>[Gorlab] not as in &#8220;thought&#8221;<br \/>[Annatar] no<br \/>[Maeglin_Lomion] Aredhel &#8211; &#8220;soft&#8221; TH?<br \/>[Figgy] as in&#8230;?<br \/>[Annatar] D was Sometimes used for DH in Tolkiens early writings <br \/>[Gorlab] a good word seen in the LOTR movie I believe is Galadhrim&#8230;<br \/>[Figgy] oooh&#8230;cool<br \/>[Annatar] but he later smitched to DH for clarity in LOTR<br \/>[Annatar] in the 1st Editon of LOTR it&#8217;s &#8220;Galadrim&#8221;<br \/>[Elaran] interesting<br \/>[Annatar] but he later changed it to &#8220;GalaDHrim&#8221;<br \/>[Gorlab] Try the soft &#8220;th&#8221; sound followed by the trilled &#8220;r&#8221;<br \/>[Dsthenes] ah, interesting<br \/>[Gorlab] it&#8217;s a beautiful sound&#8230;<br \/>[Figgy] it sounds very nice \ud83d\ude42<br \/>[GuestLastar] makes it easier to pronounce<br \/>[Annatar] &#8220;galad&#8221; is &#8220;light&#8221; &#8220;galadh&#8221; is tree<br \/>[Dsthenes] galathrim?<br \/>[Annatar] Galadriel has the &#8220;light&#8221; element like Gil Galad<br \/>[Elaran] Haldir is about the only person to pronounce Galadhrim correctly (in the extended version)<br \/>[Annatar] he&#8217;s a good elf<br \/>[Gorlab] Yes, Elaran!<br \/>[Elaran] Gimli mutilates it \ud83d\ude09<br \/>[Gorlab] Gimli WOULD though&#8230;<br \/>[Elaran] sorry to interupt!<br \/>[GuestLastar] ah. evil dwarves<br \/>[Annatar] GalaDHrim has the &#8220;tree&#8221; element <br \/>[Ks] tree?<br \/>[Annatar] tree people<br \/>[Elaran] galadh= tree galad = light<br \/>[Gorlab] The Galadhrim are the peoples of Lothlorien&#8230;<br \/>[Gorlab] Of the trees&#8230;<br \/>[Annatar] A great name with DH is Maedhros form the Silmarillion<br \/>[Maeglin_Lomion] That is a beautiful-sounding name.<br \/>[Annatar] &#8217;cause, he also has the AE sound<br \/>[Gorlab] which brings us to long and short vowels&#8230;<br \/>[Dsthenes] Now I&#8217;m going to have to reform a heap of name pronunciations again. \ud83d\ude42<br \/>[Gorlab] whenever you see a vowel by itself&#8230;<br \/>[Annatar] it&#8217;s difficult to pronounce but it&#8217;s like &#8220;I&#8221; in English<br \/>[Gorlab] it is pronounced &#8220;short&#8221;<br \/>[Lefolas] how many times have you guys done all of this? teaching people elvish<br \/>[Gorlab] but when you see a vowel with an accent mrk above it&#8230;<br \/>[2[Gorlab] that vowel becomes long&#8230;<br \/>[Figgy] example?<br \/>[Gorlab] short &#8220;A&#8221; is pronounced like &#8220;Han Solo&#8221;. when we first meet him in Star Wars&#8230;<br \/>[Gorlab] long &#8220;A&#8221; os pronounced as in &#8220;father&#8221;<br \/>[Figgy] I see<br \/>[Indil] so, the circumflex accent always indicates a long vowel?<br \/>[Gorlab] Yes&#8230;<br \/>[Annatar] yes, but it&#8217;s also used for visual effect in non-Elven tongues<br \/>[Lady_Samwise] hte a in father and in han sound the same though<br \/>[Legolas17] ok my question  is ok now&#8230;. i guess<br \/>[Legolas17] the double l, like in &#8216;mellon&#8217; -friend<br \/>[Maeglin_Lomion] So &acirc; would be pronounced like the a in &#8220;day?&#8221;<br \/>[Annatar] such as Adunaic and Khuxdul &#8212; Dwarvish<br \/>[samgamgee7] yea, i got lost on that one too, Lady_Samwise&#8230;<br \/>[Elaran] they should sound the same, the only difference is the length<br \/>[Lady_Samwise] \ud83d\ude42<br \/>[samgamgee7] a lil further clarification on that one?<br \/>[Figgy] yeah<br \/>[Legolas17] is it not pronounced like in the back of the throat h<br \/>[Figgy] their length is different<br \/>[Legolas17] ?<br \/>[Lady_Samwise] oh IC&#8230;<br \/>[Figgy] maybe &#8220;cat&#8221; and &#8220;father&#8221;<br \/>[samgamgee7] ahhh, ok  : )<br \/>[Gorlab] &#8220;Han&#8221; is more like &#8220;hand&#8221; than the &#8220;a&#8221; in &#8220;father&#8221;<br \/>[Annatar] for the AY in day you need EI<br \/>[Indil] I think like the a in man rather than han<br \/>[Lia_the_vampire] im a little confused<br \/>[Maeglin_Lomion] Thank you.<br \/>[Annatar] Okay from the top<br \/>[Gorlab] &#8220;man&#8221; will do fine&#8230;<br \/>[Annatar] A is the European &#8220;a&#8221;<br \/>[[Gorlab] short &#8220;a&#8221; is like &#8220;man&#8221;<br \/>[Gorlab] long &#8220;a&#8221; is like &#8220;Father&#8221;<br \/>[Elaran] as in british english? or are we refering to other celtic or Norse languages?<br \/>[Annatar] &#8220;E&#8221; is the Euro &#8220;E&#8221; not the American one<br \/>[Annatar] Italian is a good guide to Elvish vowels<br \/>[Maeglin_Lomion] Example? I&#8217;m American<br \/>[CloakedGuest thinks to pronounce the majority of vowels as they would be in Spanish<br \/>[Lia_the_vampire] im a vampire<br \/>[Gorlab] short &#8220;i&#8221; is like &#8220;pit&#8221;<br \/>[Annatar] and long is like Pete<br \/>[Gorlab] long &#8220;i&#8221; is like the one in &#8220;machine&#8221;<br \/>[Annatar] O is like &#8220;Lore&#8221;<br \/>[[Gorlab] short &#8220;o&#8221; is like &#8220;box&#8221;<br \/>[Gorlab] long &#8220;o&#8221; is like &#8220;sore&#8221;<br \/>[liam] We&#8217;re talking Sindarin, right?<br \/>[Annatar] but not &#8220;Open&#8221;<br \/>[Annatar] same for Q and S<br \/>[Gorlab] these pronunciations are nearly universal for elvish&#8230;<br \/>[Annatar] Different in Tengwar, Same in the Roman Characters<br \/>[liam] Q doesn&#8217;t make as much difference between long and short vowels, I understand.<br \/>[Annatar] not really, but the spelling in English takes care of that<br \/>[hobbit] wut does Falchrist mean?<br \/>[hobbit] short i, not long<br \/>[Gorlab] Sounds Old english&#8230;Annatar?<br \/>[Annatar] Coast Cleaver?<br \/>[Elaran] it means something on the order of &#8220;deep cutting ravine&#8221; or possibly &#8220;deep cutting cleaver&#8221;<br \/>[Annatar] Falas &#8212; coast, Orcrist Orc -cleaver<br \/>[Eressea] Most of the r&#8217;s seem to be trilled.<br \/>[liam] and hold the second o a little longer.<br \/>[Gorlab] actually, the &#8220;r&#8217; must be trilled in all positions&#8230;<br \/>[CloakedGuest] Also, from Old English I believe, the &#8220;Gan&#8221; part means &#8220;to wander&#8221;  &#8230; for I am descended from someone called Ganger.<br \/>[Mo] what is a trilled r?<br \/>[Eressea] Standard Elvish pronunciation to trill r&#8217;s?<br \/>[Elaran] tis what gives the language part of its flavor =)  Tolkien seemed to dislike the uvelar r that the french use<br \/>[Salquendor] from what i understand quenya vowels are like romance language vowels, from the site it seems to be all of my spanish vowels and the quenya vowels match (short form)<br \/>[liam] trilled r&#8217;s are a bit like Spanish rr <br \/>[Annatar] it can be tappped, bur it is never the retoflex R of American English<br \/>[Guest1] whats hello in elvish?<br \/>[Indil] so the trilled r Ian McKellen uses to say &#8220;mordor&#8221; in the films is correct?<br \/>[[Gorlab] Yes, it is standard, although you don&#8217;t have to get excited like Charro on the Love Boat&#8230;<br \/>[Brandalf85] Hello in elvish is &#8220;vendui&#8221;<br \/>[Brandalf85] well that is &#8220;Greetings&#8221;<br \/>[Guest1] oh thanks<br \/>[Gorlab] ABSOLUTELY!!! One of Ian McKellan&#8217;s great pronunciations&#8230;<br \/>[liam] Yes, McKellen gets that dead to rights.<br \/>[Annatar] Tolkien said that he believed that Italian Vowels were the closest to Quenya<br \/>[Eressea] Who&#8217;s excited?<br \/>[2[Guest1] how do you prononce it?<br \/>[Brandalf85] Ven Doo<br \/>[Gorlab] Or, &#8220;Aiya!&#8221; which means &#8220;hail!&#8221; or &#8220;Greetings!&#8221;<br \/>[Annatar] The Sindarin Y however seems to be Welsh<br \/>[Guest1] cool<br \/>[Brandalf85] yes Gor<br \/>[Salquendor] annatar, i dont know much italian, but they are close to spanish short vowels correct?<br \/>[[Brandalf85] Mckellen got Gandalfs voice from Tolkiens<br \/>[Indil] It cstainly sounds more impressive that way \ud83d\ude42<br \/>[liam] the Sindarin Y is like German u-umlat.<br \/>[Brandalf85] i have some of tolkien reading on tape<br \/>[[Gorlab] Also, the fomal greeting is &#8220;Elen Sila Lumenn Omentielvo&#8221;<br \/>[Elaran] vendu?  would we not see something from the roots _suilanna_ or _suila_?<br \/>[Guest1] is namarie goodbye?<br \/>[Brandalf85] yes guest<br \/>[liam] Say &#8220;ee&#8221; and then round your lips like you would for saying &#8220;o&#8221;.<br \/>[Brandalf85] actually its &#8220;Farewell&#8221;<br \/>[Annatar] Since Sindarin was modelled on Welsh to a certain degree, this makes sense<br \/>[Gorlab] Namarie is indeed &#8220;Good-bye&#8221;<br \/>[Gorlab] from Na, meaning &#8220;is&#8221;<br \/>[Brandalf85] i have a website that gives like a whole list of elvish phrases<br \/>[Guest1] whats how are you?<br \/>[Gorlab] and &#8220;marie&#8221; meaning &#8220;it is good&#8221;<br \/>[Elaran] and Navaer is the deduced sindarin counterpart<br \/>[Gorlab] correct<br \/>[hobbit] namarie means be in good health, if i am correct<br \/>[Brandalf85] http:\/\/www.grey-company.org\/Circle\/language\/phrase.htm<br \/>[Brandalf85] there<br \/>[Elaran] gah  no!<br \/>[Brandalf85] for elvish phrases<br \/>[Gorlab] &#8220;be good&#8221; would be a possible literal translation for &#8220;Namarie&#8221;<br \/>[Eressea] I was under the impression that Grey Company Elvish was fan-devised.<br \/>[Annatar] okay, back to vowels<br \/>[Gorlab] I&#8217;m sure there are others&#8230;<br \/>[Annatar] AE and AI are very close<br \/>[Elaran] it is Eressea, its devised out of both Sindarin and Quenya for roleplaying purposes<br \/>[Elaran] hence my personal distaste for it<br \/>[Figgy] how is Eressea pronounced?<br \/>[Brandalf85] Eres Say<br \/>[Brandalf85] i believe<br \/>[[Eressea] Er &#8211; ess &#8211; ay &#8211; ah<br \/>[Brandalf85] or not<br \/>[Figgy] ah<br \/>[Figgy] good<br \/>[Eressea] It&#8217;s spelled Eress&euml;a with the funny accent on the third &#8216;e&#8217;.<br \/>[Elaran] diaresis \ud83d\ude09<br \/>[[Annatar] A is the &#8220;father&#8221; A, I is the sound in &#8220;meet&#8221; together you get &#8220;I&#8221; the english pronoun<br \/>[Gorlab] With the accent on the &#8220;ay&#8221; sound&#8230;<br \/>[Figgy] I&#8217;ve been saying it right then<br \/>[Eressea] Or as Eresse&auml; if you&#8217;re not talking about the island, but the word.<br \/>[Gorlab] a diaresis is used to 1:<br \/>[Gorlab] Clarify seperate pronunciation of vowels<br \/>[Gorlab] 2. for a final &#8220;e&#8221;<br \/>[Annatar] E is the A of &#8220;lady&#8221;<br \/>[Figgy] I see<br \/>[Gorlab] or 3 for vowel combinations.<br \/>[Eressea] Diaresis is the two-dots thing?<br \/>[Annatar] like Spanish Italian etc.<br \/>[Gorlab] two dots thingy, yup!<br \/>[Annatar] two dots, two sounds<br \/>[GuestLastar] oh. what is the pronounciation difference between &euml; and e<br \/>[Gorlab] &#8220;au&#8221; os pronounced as in &#8220;cow&#8221;<br \/>[Gorlab] Try pronouncing the God &#8220;Aule&#8221;<br \/>[Eressea] GuestLastar, iirc &#8220;&euml;&#8221; tends to take on the &#8220;ay&#8221; sound.<br \/>[GuestLastar] thnx<br \/>[Indil] Like &#8220;owly?<br \/>[Brandalf85] lol<br \/>[Annatar] We used to call the &#8220;dotted&#8221; E &#8220;Feanorian&#8221; it jest means to separate thevowles<br \/>[Brandalf85] i always pronounced Aule like &#8220;oo lee&#8221;<br \/>[Gorlab] Ow-leh<br \/>[Brandalf85] for some reason<br \/>[Gorlab] &#8220;eu&#8221; is pronounced like the name of the Peter Gabriel album &#8220;so&#8221;<br \/>[CloakedGuest thinks of the word lengu&euml;ta in Spanish as an example of how diaresis changes sound similar to what Eressea says<br \/>[Eressea] I was doing &#8220;Oh &#8211; lay&#8221; but I suppose, given &#8220;S ow &#8211; ron&#8221;, it should be ow-leh&#8230;<br \/>[Annatar] diaresis is used the same way that is is in <br \/>[[Mo] would eu be like the french word for water then?<br \/>[Annatar] French E.G. &#8220;noel&#8221;<br \/>[Annatar] yes<br \/>[Gorlab] Sow-rahn, as in &#8220;cow-rahn&#8221;, Dark Lord of Cattle&#8230;<br \/>[Eressea] lolol<br \/>[Maeglin_Lomion] \ud83d\ude42 Gorlab<br \/>[Gorlab] &#8220;iu&#8221; is pronounced like &#8220;yoo&#8221;<br \/>[Annatar] in lieu of<br \/>[Annatar] for example<br \/>[Gorlab] and, the skate-punk&#8217;s fave: &#8220;oi&#8221; is pronounced as in &#8220;toy&#8221;<br \/>[Dsthenes] heh<br \/>[GuestLastar] umm&#8230; is there a between in meaning betwen, for example, faire and fair&euml; becuz of the &euml;?<br \/>[GuestLastar] *difference<br \/>[Annatar] not to my knowlege<br \/>[Gorlab] final &#8220;e&#8221; always recieves the diaresis&#8230;<br \/>[Gorlab] it really just means that it is always pronounced seperately<br \/>[Gorlab] in fact, you almost don&#8217;t need it&#8230;<br \/>[Annatar] speaking of stress . . .<br \/>[Annatar] Who here knows how it works?<br \/>[Gorlab] Which sylablle gets the &#8220;oomph&#8221;?<br \/>[Mo] is it the middle syllable?<br \/>[Elaran] I do<br \/>[Elaran] though it is somewhat complex<br \/>[Maeglin_Lomion] 2nd out of 4th, if 4 syllables?<br \/>[Indil] In Welsh it would be the middle&#8230;<br \/>[Gorlab] Well, what if you only have on sylablle?<br \/>[Eressea] Elvish is inflexive, is it not?<br \/>[Elaran] then it falls on the one \ud83d\ude09<br \/>[Annatar] basically, if there are more than one syllable, the 2nd or 3rd to last gets it<br \/>[Gorlab] Two syllables will ALWAYS be on the first syllable as well&#8230;<br \/>[Figgy] we got lots of training on stressed syllables in school<br \/>[Gorlab] EXCEPT for&#8230;<br \/>[Gorlab] one word: &#8220;Ava&#8221;<br \/>[Gorlab] it means &#8220;Don&#8217;t!&#8221;<br \/>[Eressea] Ava, as in Avatar?<br \/>[Indil] or Avari, the refusers?<br \/>[Annatar] different language<br \/>[Gorlab] In Elvish, Avatar would be &#8220;Don&#8217;t King&#8221;<br \/>[Annatar] yes<br \/>[Gorlab] Avari! Yes!<br \/>[Annatar] no<br \/>[Annatar] lol<br \/>[Eressea] Perhapts it&#8217;s Av-atar, rather than ava-tar, then..<br \/>[Maeglin_Lomion] Haldir always seems to be pronounced Hal-DEER. Would that be an exception, or is everyone pronouncing it wrong?<br \/>[Elaran] it should be on the first<br \/>[Annatar] I think it&#8217;s a mistake, and it&#8217;s also why he seems a little annoyed<br \/>[Indil] lol!<br \/>[Elaran] the only time I can think of where one _might_ place it finally would be if the word incorporated a circumflex (possibly to mark it as irregular stress)<br \/>[Eressea] So how does one pronounce &#8220;Ancalagoth&#8221; in terms of stress?<br \/>[Annatar] AnCALagoth<br \/>[Annatar] not AncalAgoth<br \/>[Gorlab] Well, here&#8217;s where our idea of long and short vowels comes in handy&#8230;<br \/>[Annatar] and single and double consonants<br \/>[[Eressea] So like Caribbean, then.  \ud83d\ude42<br \/>[Gorlab] If a word has 3 or more sylablles&#8230;<br \/>[Gorlab] many are stressed on the second-to-last sylablle&#8230;<br \/>[Gorlab] BUT<br \/>[Indil] so, MinDOLluin? Instead of MINdolluin?<br \/>[Gorlab] if this syllable is SHORT<br \/>[Annatar] if the 2nd to last Syllable has a &#8220;short&#8221; vowel or is separated from the last one by a single consonant, then it&#8217;s too &#8220;weak to get the stress<br \/>[Gorlab] (Sure Oh cloaked one)<br \/>[Gorlab] A short syllable is one that<br \/>[Annatar] in which case stress moves to the 3rd to last syllable<br \/>[CloakedGuest] (thank you Gorlab)<br \/>[Gorlab] 1. Contains no long vowel and<br \/>[Gorlab] 2 is followed by only one consonant or no consonant at all<br \/>[Annatar] in technical terms the 3rd to last syllable is the &#8220;antepenultimate&#8221;<br \/>[Gorlab] If this sylablle is SHORT<br \/>[Gorlab] then the 3rd-to-last sylablle gets the stress&#8230;<br \/>[Eressea] What a word, &#8220;antepenultimate&#8221;&#8230;<br \/>[Elaran] lol tis better than antidisestablishmentarianism \ud83d\ude09<br \/>[Eressea] Ante-pen-ultimate&#8230; that would be before-almost-last, yes?<br \/>[Eressea] Hence, third-last.<br \/>[Maeglin_Lomion] An example of this? I&#8217;m confuzzled&#8230;&#8230;<br \/>[Gorlab] Annatar &#8211; an example?<br \/>[Annatar] ThangorOdrim<br \/>[Gorlab] As opposed to..<br \/>[Gorlab] ThangORodrim&#8230;<br \/>[Annatar] DR is bigger separation than G<br \/>[Eressea] Then GonDOlin over GONdolin?<br \/>[ohtar_i_anar] is there any stress?<br \/>[CloakedGuest] In fact, I&#8217;ve been saying GondoLIN.<br \/>[CloakedGuest] \ud83d\ude42<br \/>[ohtar_i_anar] there is no mark<br \/>[Annatar] no, ND vs. L<br \/>[Maeglin_Lomion] So have I.  \ud83d\ude42<br \/>[Indil] So Mindolluin, above, should really be MidolLUIN?<br \/>[Annatar] LL<br \/>[Indil] *MindolLUIN<br \/>[Annatar] MindOLLuin<br \/>[Indil] oh dear. This is very confusing :-0<br \/>[ohtar_i_anar] actually, when I say it, I find myself saying gonDOlin<br \/>[Annatar] not the boat<br \/>[ohtar_i_anar] I know<br \/>[Gorlab] This completes my time here in the Hall, thanks for listening&#8230;be here next week for more &#8211; Annatar might stay a bit&#8230;<br \/>[Annatar] or, rather like GONDola instead of gondOla<br \/>[Eressea] Thanks, Gorlab.  \ud83d\ude42<br \/>[Indil] Thank you gorlab. This has been very helpful!<br \/>[Maeglin_Lomion] Thanks, Gorlab.<br \/>[Annatar] follow the consonants, and when they don&#8217;s help. look for accents<br \/>[Mo] Thank you Gorlab &#8211; cant&#8217; be here usually bacause of work, but i appreciate it<br \/>[Pippin] ok, so what form of Elvish are we learning exactly?<br \/>[furryfootses] where can i get all the info that i missed since these lessons started<br \/>[<annatar] general pronunciation <br \/>[furryfootses] sindar, quenya, etc.?<br \/>[Eressea] On the site, furryfootses, I believe there are logs&#8230;<br \/>[Annatar] The chat as a whole will try to cover Quenya and Sindarin<br \/>[Pippin] ok, cool \ud83d\ude42<br \/>[Annatar] However, they overlap considerably<br \/>[Pippin is learning Quenya, but it kinda confuses her as the lesson planner uses big words<br \/>[furryfootses] thanks, eressea and annatar<br \/>[Annatar] if anyone has any germaine questions please ask, otherwise, my fingers hurt<br \/>[Legolas17] how is ll pronounced, as in &#8216;mellon&#8217;?<br \/>[Pippin] like a normal l<br \/>[Pippin] not like spanish<br \/>[Mo] Do you know any examples for long and short E? i&#8217;m not familiar with more european styles<br \/>Gorlab has quit IRC (Quit: Leaving)<br \/>[Legolas17] i read somewhere that it was pronounced like a harsh h in the back of the throat<br \/>[Annatar] thank you every one I&#8217;ll see y&#8217;all later<br \/>[Pippin] somewhere must have been referring to Gandalf&#8217;s pronunciation of the word in the Bakshi edition of LOTR<br \/>[Indil] Thank you so much Annatar!<br \/>[Maeglin_Lomion] Thank you, Annatar.<br \/>[Eressea] Thank you, Annatar.  \ud83d\ude42<br \/>[Legolas17] thanks Annatar<br \/>[Dsthenes] thanks, Annatar. \ud83d\ude42<br \/>[Mo] Thank you Annatar<br \/>[GuestLastar] thnx annatar<br \/>[Pippin] thank you Annatar<\/p>\n<p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>[Annatar] hello, we&#8217;re trying to connect a 2nd machine right now, this is paul, Kris will also be&#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":17,"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-25539","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-6DV","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.theonering.net\/torwp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/25539","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\/17"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.theonering.net\/torwp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=25539"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.theonering.net\/torwp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/25539\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.theonering.net\/torwp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=25539"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.theonering.net\/torwp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=25539"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.theonering.net\/torwp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=25539"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}