THE EVOLUTION FROM PRIMITIVE ELVISH TO QUENYA
BY
HELGE KÅRE FAUSKANGER
EDITED WITH NOTES AND COMMENTS BY
VICENTE S. VELASCO
REVISED, EXPANDED AND UPDATED VERSION
“ARDALAMBION — Of the Tongues of Arda” is a website dedicated to the study of the languages created by J.R.R. Tolkien.
Webmaster: Helge Kåre FAUSKANGER. Email: [email protected]
THE EVOLUTION FROM PRIMITIVE ELVISH TO QUENYA is originally published in the Ardalambion website as an RTF (Rich Text Format) file. This can be downloaded at http://www.uib.no/People/hnohf/ qevolu- tion.rtf. This PDF (Adobe® Portable Document Format) file is an expanded and updated version with further annotations of Mr. FAUSKANGER and Mr. Vicente S. VELASCO.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Preface page 5
Abbreviations Used in this Article 5
INTRODUCTION 7
PRIMITIVE QUENDIAN 11
COMMON ELDARIN 16 THE LOSS OF MEDIAL (OR H) AND Ñ 18
PRE-RECORD QUENYA 23 BEGINNING OF THE RETRACTION PERIOD 25 THE QUENYA SYNCOPE 26 THE SPIRANTS ARISE 28 THE SHORTENING OF FINAL VOWELS IN POLYSYLLABIC WORDS 30 DEVOICING OF MEDIAL COMBINATIONS 31 NEW VOWELS 32 CHANGES AMONG MEDIAL CONSONANT CLUSTERS 34 OTHER VOWEL CHANGES (INCLUDING DIPHTHONGS) 38
CHANGES PRODUCING VALINOREAN QUENYA 42 ANTICIPATORY VOWELS DEVELOPING FOLLOWING + CONSONANT 44 SECONDARY SYNCOPE 48
CHANGES PRODUCING EXILIC QUENYA 50
APPENDIX: SOME SPECIAL CASES 57
Preface by the Editor
This article was originally written by Helge Kåre Fauskanger as part of his Ardalambion website. I have taken the liberty to edit the original text, limiting myself largely by cor- recting some grammatical errors, reorganizing and tightening the text from redundancies, as well as changing some of his orthographical conventions (mostly because of the limita- tions of the Rich Text Format) so it would be as close to his original intentions as I deemed possible. I have confined my own comments, additions and annotations to endnotes. Helge’s own notes originally interspersed in the main text are moved to the footnotes. He was also kind enough to send me revisions and additional annotations to be included in the final version.
Abbreviations Used in this Article
(All page references refer to the standard hardbound or trade paperback editions unless otherwise indicated.)
Etym: The Etymologies, in The Lost Road and Other Writings, pp. 347-400 Letters: The Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien. References refer to page number, not letter number. LotR: The Lord of the Rings. Page references are from the standard one-volume edition first published in 1991; all subsequent re-set editions have the same pagination. LR: The Lost Road and Other Writings. The History of Middle-earth, vol. 5 LT1: The Book of Lost Tales, Part 1. The History of Middle-earth, vol. 1 LT2: The Book of Lost Tales, Part 2. The History of Middle-earth, vol. 2 MR: Morgoth’s Ring. The History of Middle-earth, vol. 10 PM: The Peoples of Middle-earth. The History of Middle-earth, vol. 12 QL: Qenya Lexicon (Qenyaquetsa), published in Parma Eldalamberon 12 RGEO: The Road Goes Ever On. SD: Sauron Defeated. The History of Middle-earth, vol. 9 Silm: The Silmarillion. As published by Houghton Mifflin: both the First Edition (1977) and the Second Edition (2001) have identical paginations. WJ: The War of the Jewels. The History of Middle-earth, vol. 11 UT: Unfinished Tales of Númenor and Middle-earth. VT: Vinyar Tengwar. Journal of the Elvish Linguistic Fellowship and the Mythopoeic Society. References refer to issue number and page.
CE: Common Eldarin Kh: Khuzdul PQ: Primitive Quendian Q: Quenya S: Sindarin T: Telerin
INTRODUCTION
Whereas many students of J.R.R. Tolkien's languages would be inclined to focus on their “classical” form—that is, Quenya and Sindarin as they are supposed to have existed at the time when the narratives of The Lord of the Rings and The Silmarillion took place—the author himself is often seen to focus rather on the long evolution of these languages from the earliest forms of Elvish. Observes Christopher Tolkien, “My father was perhaps more interested in the processes of change than he was in displaying the structure and use of the languages at any given time” (LR:342). Elsewhere, he comments on how his father worked out a “minutely refined historical development of Quenya and Sindarin” (PM:367). To the academic, the fact that the historical development was so important to Tolkien should be sufficient to warrant a careful study of it. A deeper understanding of how the languages were supposed to have evolved during the long ages of Arda will also lead to a fuller apprehension of the method, spirit and focus of Tolkien's work. Yet this study does not have to be wholly “academic”: People who want to develop a Tolkien-language like Quenya into a useable system, even coining new words from Tolkien's roots to supplement the existing vocabulary, must know what rules Tolkien himself applied when developing Quenya vocabulary. It is a matter of debate whether a post-Tolkien Quenya word can be counted as a “genuine” word, but everybody would agree that a word that was not derived in accordance with Tolkien's rules and does not fit into his system couldn’t be counted as genuine in any sense. What follows is a comprehensive (not “exhaustive”!) list of phonological changes that occurred during the evolution of Quenya. Though I briefly describe the nature of the changes, I have focused more on providing a survey of the observed changes than on formulating abstract “rules” that may seem to govern the sound-shifts. The changes have been listed in what may be assumed to be something roughly similar to their chronological order. The material has been grouped under the following headings: