'Sindarin' is an
artificial language developed by
J. R. R. Tolkien. In Tolkien's mythos, it was the
Elvish language most commonly spoken in Middle-earth in the Third Age. It was the language of the
Sindar, those
Teleri which had been left behind on the
Great Journey of the Elves. It was derived from an earlier language called
Common Telerin. When the
Noldor returned to Middle-earth, they adopted the Sindarin language, although they believed their native
Quenya more beautiful. Sindarin shared common roots with
Quenya, and the two languages had many similar words. Sindarin was said to be more changeful than the older tongue, however, and there were a number of regional 'dialects' of the tongue. The Sindarin spoken in
Doriath was said to be the highest and most noble form of the language.
Before the downfall, most of the
Men of
Númenor also spoke the language. Knowledge of it was kept in the
Númenórean exile realm of
Gondor, especially amongst the learned. Sindarin is the language referred to as ''the Elven-tongue'' in ''
The Lord of the Rings''.
Tolkien originally imagined that the language which would become ''Sindarin'' was spoken by the Noldor (second clan of
Elves). However, Tolkien later decided that it was the language of the
Sindar. For this reason it is called ''Noldorin'' in the older material, such as the Etymologies. When Noldorin became Sindarin, it also adopted some features of the originally unrelated language ''Ilkorin''. Tolkien based the sound and some of the grammar of his Noldorin/Sindarin on
Welsh, and Sindarin displays some of the consonant mutations that characterise the Celtic (especially
Brythonic) languages. The language was also probably influenced to an extent by the Germanic languages, as Tolkien was a scholar of
Old English,
Old Norse and
Gothic.
Within the fiction Sindarin was written in the
Cirth alphabet prior to the return of the Noldor to Middle-earth, but afterwards it was usually written in
Tengwar.
In the real world the language is usually written in the
Latin alphabet, representing a
transcription from the "original Tengwar" or "original Cirth". Some
Tolkien enthusiasts write in Cirth or Tengwar, using specialized fonts or the
Unicode proposal in the
ConScript Unicode Registry, but most
neo-Sindarin samples are written in the Latin alphabet.
Grammar
Sindarin is mainly analytic, though traits of its highly inflected progenitor can still be seen.
Phonology
Sindarin was designed to have a
Welsh-like sound
phonology. It has most of the same sounds and a similar sound structure, or
phonotactics.
Consonants
The //
phoneme is pronounced [] when final or before //.
Vowels
Monophthongs
Other
orthographic notes
| 'Letter' | 'IPA' | 'Notes' |
|---|
| i | | Represents [j] when initial before vowels, [i] everywhere else. |
| ng | | Represents [ŋ] when final, [ŋg] everywhere else. |
| ph | | Represents [f] when final, [ff] everywhere else. |
An accent signifies a long vowel (á, é, etc). In a monosyllabic word, a circumflex is used (â, ê, etc). However, for practical reasons, users of the
ISO Latin-1 character set often substitute ý for ŷ, as ISO Latin-1 does not have a character for ŷ, only ý and ÿ.
Diphthongs are ''ai'' (pronounced like 'ai'sle ), ''ei'' (d'ay' ), ), ''ui'' (t'oo y'oung) or (r'ui'n) ), and ''au'' (c'ow' ), ). If the last diphthong finishes a word, it is spelt ''aw''. There are also diphthongs ''ae'' and ''oe'' with no English counterparts; if one does not care about the details, Tolkien recommended to substitute ''ai'' and ''oi'', respectively. If one does care, it is similar to pronouncing ''a'' or ''o'' respectively in the same syllable as one pronounces an ''e'' (as in p'e't).
In archaic Sindarin, there was a vowel similar to German ''ö'' (IPA: ), which Tolkien mostly transcribed as ''œ'' (usually ''not'' as ''oe'' as is often found in publications like the Silmarillion, cf. ''Nirnaeth Arnoediad'' [read: ''Nírnaeth Arnœdiad''], ''Goelydh'' [read: ''Gœlydh'']). This vowel later came to be pronounced and is therefore transcribed as such [sc. ''Gelydh''].
Archaic Sindarin also had a spirant ''m'' or nasal ''v'' (IPA: ), which was transcribed as ''mh'' (though always pronounced in later Sindarin).
Nouns
Pluralization
Sindarin
plurals are characterised by ''
i-mutation''. The Sindarin term for this is ''prestanneth'' (disturbance, affection). Almost all Sindarin nouns form their plurals like English man/men and goose/geese — by changing the vowels in the word. They are due to the
Primitive Elvish plural marking ''-ī'' (still in
Quenya as ''-i'') making the other vowels higher and fronter in a sort of
vowel harmony, but then the final ''-ī'' was lost, leaving the altered medial vowels behind: singular ''tulus'' > primitive plural ''tulussī'' > ''tylyssī'' > ''tylys''. This feature of Sindarin clearly shows the influence of the Celtic languages (especially
Welsh) on the language (see
Affection (linguistics)). The plural patterns are:
★ In non-final syllables:
★
★ a > e — g'a'ladh > g'e'laidh
★
★ e > e — b'e'reth > b'e'rith
★
★ ei > e — cel'ei'rdan > cel'e'rdain
★
★ o > e — n'o'goth > n'e'gyth
★
★ u > y — t'u'lus > t'y'lys
★
★ y > y — (no example available)
★ In final syllables:
★
★ a with one consonant following > ai — ar'a'n > er'ai'n
★
★ a with two or more consonants following > e — n'a'rn > n'e'rn
★
★ â > ai — t'â'l > t'ai'l
★
★ e > i — adan'e'th > eden'i'th
★
★ ê > î — h'ê'n > h'î'n
★
★ i > i — brenn'i'l > brenn'i'l
★
★ î > î — d'î's > d'î's
★
★ o > y — brann'o'n > brenn'y'n
★
★ ó > ý — b'ó'r > b'ý'r
★
★ ô > ŷ — th'ô'n > th'ŷ'n
★
★ u > y — ur'u'g > yr'y'g
★
★ û > ui — h'û' > h'ui'
★
★ y > y — 'y'lf > 'y'lf
★
★ ý > ý — m'ý'l > m'ý'l
★
★ au > oe — n'au'g > n'oe'g (cf. German ''au'' > ''äu'')
★
★ aea > ei - 'aea'r > 'ei'r (presumably changed further to air as is common at the end of Sindarin words; "a" actually changes to "ei" before "ai")
Note that ''ai'' can sometimes become ''î'' (or, less commonly, ''ý'').
Class plural
Sindarin also has several suffixes which denote a so-called class plural. For example, ''-ath'' indicates a group of something, e. g. ''elenath'' from elen (an archaic form of ''êl''), meaning ''star'', and ''-ath''. It means ''a group of stars'' or ''all the stars in the sky''. Another ending, ''-rim'', is used to indicate a race, e. g. ''nogothrim'' from ''nogoth'' — ''dwarf'' and ''-rim'', meaning ''the race of dwarves''. The ending ''-hoth'' is generally used in an unfriendly sense, e. g. ''gaurhoth'' from ''gaur'' — ''werewolf'' and ''-hoth'', meaning ''werewolf-host''.
Mutation
Sindarin has a complex series of
mutations. There are three main different types of mutations: ''soft mutation'' (or
lenition), ''nasal mutation'' and ''stop'' (occlusive) ''mutation''. Additionally, a ''mixed mutation'' is also observed after certain particles or prepositions. Finally, it is presumed that Sindarin also once had what we could call an
''archaic spirantal mutation'' (also sometimes called ''liquid mutation'' by scholars). It is still uncertain whether this mutation is still productive or if it only occurs in ancient constructs.
Initial mutations must not be confused with
assimilations that may occur in compound words (such as, for instance, in the names ''Araphor'', ''Arassuil'' and ''Caradhras'').
The following table outlines how different consonants are affected by the different mutations.
| Basic | Soft | Nasal | Mixed | Stop | Liquid |
|---|
| b | v | m | b | b | v |
|---|
| c | g | ch | g | ch | ch |
|---|
| d | dh | n | d | d | dh |
|---|
| g | ' | ng | g | g | ' |
|---|
| h | ch | ch | h | ch | ch |
|---|
| lh | thl | 'l | 'l | thl | 'l |
|---|
| m | v | m | m | m | v |
|---|
| p | b | ph | b | b | ph |
|---|
| rh | thr | 'r | 'r | thr | 'r |
|---|
| s | h | s | h | s | s |
|---|
| t | d | th | d | th | th |
|---|
Here the apostrophe indicates
elision.
Words beginning in ''b-'', ''d-'', or ''g-'' which descend from older ''mb-'', ''nd-'', or ''ng-'' are affected differently by the mutations:
| Basic | Soft | Nasal | Mixed | Stop | Liquid |
|---|
| b | m | mb | mb | mb | b |
|---|
| d | n | nd | nd | nd | d |
|---|
| g | ng | g | g | g | g |
|---|
Take, for example, the
deictic article ''i'', which triggers soft mutation. When added to a word like ''tâl'', it becomes ''i dâl''. In Sindarin's phonological history, ''t'' became ''d'' in the middle of a word. Because ''i tâl'' at the time was considered one word, the ''t'' became ''d'', and thus ''i dâl''. However, without the article the word is still ''tâl''.
Mutation is triggered in various ways:
★ Soft mutation, the most widely occurring mutation, is triggered by the singular article ''i'', the prefixes ''athra-, ath-, go-, gwa-, ú-,'' and ''u-'', as well as the prepositions ''ab, am, adel, be, dad, di, na, nu,'' and ''î'', and after ''avo''. It also affects the second element in a compound, an adjective following a noun, and the object of a verb.
★ Nasal mutation is triggered by the plural article ''in'', and the prepositions ''an, dan,'' and plural 'nin''.
★ Mixed mutation is triggered by the genitive article ''en'', and the prepositions ''ben, erin, nan, 'nin,'' and ''uin'' (with a singular word; when there is a plural the mutation is Nasal, as in ''aglar 'ni Pheriannath'' "glory to-the Halflings").
★ Stop mutation is triggered by the prepositions ''ed, ned,'' and ''o(d)''.
★ Liquid mutation is presumably triggered by the preposition ''or''.
Pronouns
Pronouns are perhaps the most poorly attested feature of Sindarin. What has been reconstructed by the
comparative method is largely conjectural and is not agreed upon, and therefore will not be addressed in this article.
Sindarin pronouns, like those in English, still maintain some case distinction. Sindarin pronouns have
nominative,
accusative,
genitive, and
dative forms.
| | First Person | Second Person | Third Person |
|---|
| Singular | Plural | Singular | Plural | Singular | Plural |
|---|---|
| Nominative | ''im'' | | | | ''e'' | |
|---|
| Accusative | ''nin'' | #''men'' | ''le'' (resp.) | ''le'' (resp.) | ''den'' | ''di'' ''hain'' (inanim.) |
|---|
| Genitive | ''nín'' | ''mín'' (subi. ''vín'') | | ''lín'' | ''tîn'' (subi. ''dîn'') |
|---|
| Dative | ''enni'' (refl. ''anim'') | ''ammen'' | | | | |
|---|
| Enclitic | –n | –m | ?–ch | | — | –r |
|---|
Verbs
Sindarin verbs are also quite complex. The number of attested verbs in Sindarin is small, so the Sindarin verb system is imperfectly known; no verb has a full paradigm of forms available. There are two main types of verbs: ''basic'' and ''derived''. Basic verbs have stems which end in a consonant, and derived verbs have stems which incorporate some sort derivational morpheme (such as a causative ending) which ends in ''-a''.
Basic verbs
Basic verbs, though smaller in number than derived verbs, have a very complex conjugation which arises from Sindarin's phonological history.
Basic verbs form the infinitve by adding ''-i'': ''giri'' from ''gir-''. This ending causes an ''a'' or ''o'' in the stem to umlaut to ''e'': ''blebi'' from ''blab-''. Sindarin does not use infinitive forms very often, and rather uses the gerund to achieve the same meaning.
For all persons except the third person singular, the present tense is formed by the insertion of ''-i'', and the proper enclitic pronominal ending: ''girin'', ''girim'', ''girir''. As with the infinitive, ''-i'' causes an ''a'' or ''o'' in the stem to umlaut to ''e'': ''pedin'', ''pedim'', ''pedir'', from ''pad-''. The third person singular, because it has a zero-ending, does not require the insertion of ''-i''. This leaves the bare stem, which, because of Sindarin's phonological history, causes the vowel of the stem to become long: ''gîr'', ''blâb'', ''pâd''.
The past tense of basic verbs is very complicated and poorly attested. One common reconstructed system is to use ''-n'': ''darn''. However, the only time this ''-n'' actually remains is after a stem in ''-r''. After a stem ending in ''-l'', ''-n'' becomes ''-ll'': ''toll''. After ''-b, -d, -g, -v,'' or ''-dh'', it is
metathesized and then
assimilated to the same place of articulation as the consonant it now follows. The consonant then experiences what could be called a "backwards mutation": ''-b, -d,'' and ''-g'' become ''-p, -b,'' and ''-c'', and ''-v'' and ''-dh'' become ''-m'' and ''-d''. The matter is complicated even further when pronominal endings are added. Because ''-mp, -mb, -nt, -nd,'' and ''-nc'' did not survive medially, they become ''-mm-, -mm-, -nn-, -nn-,'' and ''-ng''. In addition, past tense stems in ''-m'' would have ''-mm-'' before any pronominal endings. Because this all may seem rather overwhelming, look at these examples which show step-by-step transformations:
★ ''cab-'' >
★
★ ''cabn'' >
★
★ ''canb'' >
★
★ ''camb'' > ''camp'', becoming ''camm-'' with any pronominal endings.
★ ''ped-'' >
★
★ ''pedn'' >
★
★ ''pend'' > ''pent'', becoming ''penn-'' with any pronominal endings.
★ ''dag-'' >
★
★ ''dagn'' >
★
★ ''dang'' (''n'' pronounced as in ''men'') >
★
★ ''dang'' (''n'' pronounced as in ''sing'') > ''danc'', becoming ''dang-'' with any pronominal endings.
★ ''lav-'' >
★
★ ''lavn'' >
★
★ ''lanv'' >
★
★ ''lanm'' >
★
★ ''lamm'' > ''lam'', becoming ''lamm-'' before any pronominal endings.
★ ''redh-'' >
★
★ ''redhn'' >
★
★ ''rendh'' >
★
★ ''rend'' > ''rend'', becoming ''renn-'' before any pronominal endings.
The future tense is formed by the addition of ''-tha''. An ''-i'' is also inserted between the stem and ''-tha'', which again causes ''a'' and ''o'' to umlaut to ''e''. Endings for all persons except for the first person singular can be added without any further modification: ''giritham'', ''blebithar''. The first person singular ending ''-n'' causes the ''-a'' in ''-tha'' to become ''-o'': ''girithon'', ''blebithon'', ''pedithon''.
The imperative is formed with the addition of ''-o'' to the stem: ''giro!'', ''pado!'', ''blabo!''.
Derived verbs
Derived verbs have a much less complex conjugation because they have a thematic vowel (usually ''a'') which reduces the number of consonant combinations which occur.
The infinitive is formed with -o, which replaces the -a of the stem, e. g. ''lacho'' from ''lacha-''.
The present tense is formed without modification to the stem. Pronominal endings are added without any change, except with the first person singular enclintic -n, where the final vowel becomes an o, e.g. renion < renia - I wander.
The past tense is formed with the ending ''-nt'', which becomes ''-nne'' with any pronominal endings, e. g. ''erthant'', ''erthanner''.
The future tense is formed with ''-tha''. With the addition of the first person singular ''-n'', this becomes ''-tho''.
The imperative is formed like the infinitive.
Dialects
During the
First Age there were several dialects of Sindarin:
★ ''
Doriathrin'' or the language of
Doriath, a form of the language which preserved many archaic forms;
★ ''
Falathrin'' or the language of the
Falas, later also spoken in
Nargothrond;
★ ''
North Sindarin'', the dialects originally spoken in
Dorthonion and
Hithlum by the Sindar, these dialects contained many unique words and were not fully intelligible with the Sindarin of
Beleriand proper.
With the exception of Doriathrin, the dialects were changed under Noldorin influence, and adopted many
Quenya features, as well as unique sound changes devised by the Noldor (who loved changing languages). The distinct dialects disappeared after the Noldor and Sindar were dispersed during the later
Battles of Beleriand. In the refuges on the
Isle of Balar and the
Mouths of Sirion a new dialect arose among the refugees, which mainly took after Falathrin. During the
Second Age and
Third Age Sindarin was a
lingua franca for all Elves and their friends, until it was displaced as the
Common tongue by
Westron, a descendant of
Adûnaic which was heavily influenced by Sindarin. In Gondor, Sindarin was still spoken, but very little in daily use, and it had a heavy accent; a Gondorian speaking Sindarin would sound somewhat like an Englishman speaking French; a warning ''Orcs!'' in Sindarin ''Yrch!'', would be [yrx] proper, [irk] Gondorian.
''Sindarin'' is actually a
Quenya term, a dative form meaning ''to the
Sindar''. The Sindarin word was likely to have been '''Edhellen''' ("Elvish").
See also
★
Calendar of Imladris
★
Languages of Middle-earth
★
Neo-Eldarin
★
Quenya
★
Middle-earth
External links
★
Parma Tyelpelassiva
★
★
Sindarin Course (PDF)
★
Council of Elrond Sindarin Workbook
★
★
Sindarin Course (DOC)
★
I Lam Arth - The Noble Tongue
★
Ardalambion, a site dedicated to the languages of Middle-earth
★
★
Helge Fauskanger's Sindarin article
★
Gwaith-i-Phethdain
★
Ardhon Ellammath - Realm of the Elf-languages
★
★
Sindarin Pronunciation Guide
★
Sindanórië
★
Hisweloke's Sindarin dictionary project
★
Eternal Sailorpig (Chinese Traditional)
★
very detailed Sindarin-English & English-Sindarin dictionary also provides grammar and examples of Sindarin.