- The
Cirth (Sindarin pronunciation: [ˈkirθ],
meaning "runes"; sg.
certh [ˈkɛrθ]) is a semi‑artificial script,
based on real‑life
runic alphabets, one of...
- the
philologist and
fantasy author J. R. R. Tolkien. The best-known are
Cirth, Sarati, and Tengwar.
Being a
skilled calligrapher,
Tolkien invented scripts...
- most of
Khuzdul in the
Latin alphabet, and in
Cirth within Middle-earth. The
dwarves had
adopted the
Cirth from the
elves by the end of the
first age, and...
-
Elvish language, as most of the
languages of Men are. They
write it
using Cirth runes, a
writing system originally created by
Elves in
Beleriand to write...
- Under-ConScript
Unicode Registry include Sitelen Pona (for Toki Pona) and
Cirth. The CSUR and
UCSUR include the
following scripts: Withdrawn Allocated...
- his
Elvish languages, of
which the best
known are Sarati, Tengwar, and
Cirth. J. R. R.
Tolkien began to
construct his
first Elvin tongue c. 1910–1911...
- Beleriand. The
letters of the
earlier alphabet native to
Sindarin were
called cirth (singular certh,
probably from *kirte "cutting", and thus
semantically analogous...
-
Hobbit as seen on Thror's map of Erebor, and as a base for the
dwarvish Cirth writing systems used in The Lord of the
Rings and
described in Tolkien's...
-
original map of Middle-earth at the end of the
Third Age; and the
evolution of
Cirth in an appendix. The
third volume, The War of the Ring
continues to the opening...
-
dedicated to
fictional languages are J. R. R. Tolkien's
elaborate Tengwar and
Cirth, but many
others exist, such as the
pIqaD script for Star Trek's Klingon...